Stefanik has spent years focused on a few core fights. Each is tied to bills actually introduced or votes actually cast.
01
Consumer data privacy in retail transactionsStefanik sponsored the Protecting Privacy in Purchases Act (HR.7450), which drew between 100 and 199 cosponsors, indicating broad House interest. The bill addresses privacy protections related to consumer purchase data, reflecting a legislative focus on limiting the collection or disclosure of personal information generated through commercial transactions.
02
Workforce credentialing and skills-based federal hiringStefanik sponsored both the Advancing Skills-Based Hiring Act of 2025 (HR.4050) and the Employer-Directed Skills Act (HR.4049), each introduced in committee. These bills address federal hiring practices, focusing on skills and competency credentials as qualifications for employment rather than solely degree-based requirements.
03
Financial protections for servicemembers and veteransStefanik sponsored the Servicemember Credit Monitoring Enhancement Act (HR.5923) and the Ernest Peltz Accrued Veterans Benefits Act (HR.3123), both reintroduced in committee. These bills address credit monitoring access for active servicemembers and accrued benefits for veterans, targeting financial safeguards specific to military personnel and those who have completed service.
04
Public safety technology and first responder resourcesStefanik sponsored the Drones for First Responders Act (HR.3786), a reintroduced bill introduced in committee. The legislation addresses the availability or funding of unmanned aerial vehicle technology for emergency response personnel, reflecting engagement with modernizing the equipment and capabilities available to local public safety agencies.
05
Regional conservation and invasive species managementStefanik sponsored the Stamp Out Invasive Species Act (HR.3024) and the Maurice D. Hinchey Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area Enhancement Act (HR.2895), both reintroduced in committee. These bills address the management of invasive species and the enhancement of a federally designated heritage area in New York's Hudson River Valley, reflecting attention to regional environmental and conservation priorities.
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01 · Background
Who they are, where they came from
Elise M. Stefanik represents New York's 21st congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives, a seat she has held since January 2015. From 2021 to 2025, she served as chair of the House Republican Conference. In the current Congress, her sponsored legislation spans consumer privacy, workforce development, military recognition, environmental protection, and financial oversight. She sponsored the Protecting Privacy in Purchases Act (HR.7450), which addresses consumer data privacy in retail transactions, and the Advancing Skills-Based Hiring Act of 2025 (HR.4050) and Employer-Directed Skills Act (HR.4049), both directed at federal hiring and workforce credentialing practices. She sponsored the Servicemember Credit Monitoring Enhancement Act (HR.5923) and the Ernest Peltz Accrued Veterans Benefits Act (HR.3123), which address financial protections and benefits for military personnel and veterans. Her sponsored bills also include the Drones for First Responders Act (HR.3786), the WWII Nurses Congressional Gold Medal Act (HR.4901), the Stamp Out Invasive Species Act (HR.3024), and the Maurice D. Hinchey Hudson River Valley National Heritage Area Enhancement Act (HR.2895), reflecting engagement with public safety, historic recognition, and regional conservation. On the floor, she voted against HR.2872, a continuing appropriations measure that became law, and against HR.82, the Social Security Fairness Act of 2023, which also became law; both votes were cast against her party's majority position.
Stefanik raised $5.0M this cycle, with 49.1% from individuals and 44.7% from other receipts — primarily transfers from joint fundraising committees Team Elise ($1,523,928), Elise Victory Fund ($522,532), and Elise NY Victory ($139,873). PAC contributions account for 5.8% of receipts; beyond the joint fundraising transfers, named PAC contributors include American Israel Public Affairs Committee PAC Earmarks ($61,830) and several leadership PACs at $10,000 each. Unitemized contributions make up 59.7% of individual giving. Outside spending in the cycle totaled $92K supporting Stefanik (top spenders National Victory Action Fund at $60,000 and Citizens for Responsible Energy Solutions at $19,000) and $154K opposing her (The Lincoln Project at $134K and Rural Freedom Network at $20,000).
INFORMATION REQUESTED PER BEST EFFORTS$17K· 164 donors
ACCESS INDUSTRIES$14K· 4 donors
BLUE OWL CAPITAL$14K· 6 donors
CORCORAN PARTNERS$14K· 4 donors
JERICHO CAPITAL$10K· 3 donors
NGC$9K· 12 donors
NEXTGEN MANAGEMENT LLC$7K· 6 donors
OWNER$7K· 3 donors
ENTREPRENEUR$7K· 3 donors
SABIN METAL CORPORATION$7K· 2 donors
Self-reported employer data. Categories like “Retired” and “Not Employed” are excluded — these reflect demographic patterns rather than industry concentrations.
Independent expenditures from super PACs and other groups, separate from contributions to the candidate’s own campaign. These committees may not coordinate with the campaign.
Every claim on this page links to a public source. We don’t tell you whether Elise Stefanik is a good or bad official— that’s your call. We just make the facts easy to find.