Stevens has spent time focused on a few core fights. Each is tied to bills actually introduced or votes actually cast.
01
Federal investment in research and innovationStevens has sponsored multiple bills directing federal resources toward research collaboration and competitiveness. The Expanding Partnerships for Innovation and Competitiveness Act (HR.2582) addresses public-private innovation partnerships, while the DOE and NSF Interagency Research Act (HR.1350) targets coordination between the Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation. Both bills have been reintroduced across multiple Congresses.
02
STEM education and workforce pipeline developmentStevens sponsored the Accounting STEM Pursuit Act of 2023 (HR.3541), which drew 50 to 99 cosponsors, and the Addressing Teacher Shortages Act of 2026 (HR.7883). She also sponsored the IDEA Act of 2025 (HR.5826) and the Pell to Grad Act (HR.1635), which addresses Pell Grant eligibility for graduate students. Together these measures reflect a pattern of legislative activity around education access and STEM talent development.
03
Housing affordability and quality standardsStevens has sponsored a cluster of housing-related bills: the Fix Moldy Housing Act (HR.2746), which addresses housing conditions; the Healthy Affordable Housing Act (HR.2747); and the First Time Homeowner Savings Plan Act (HR.2748), which would establish a savings mechanism for first-time homebuyers. All three have been reintroduced, indicating sustained legislative attention to the issue.
04
Auto industry and manufacturing workforce protectionsStevens sponsored the Union Auto Workers Job Protection Act (HR.5338), a reintroduced measure with seven cosponsors addressing protections for auto workers, and the RESTART Communities Act of 2026 (HR.8238), which targets economic recovery in affected communities. Both bills are relevant to the manufacturing economy of her Oakland County district.
05
Electric vehicle infrastructure and transportation technologyStevens sponsored the Wireless Electric Vehicle Charging Grant Program Act of 2025 (HR.1892), a reintroduced bill that would establish a federal grant program for wireless EV charging infrastructure. She also sponsored the PROTECT Act of 2026 (HR.6990), a reintroduced measure with seven cosponsors, and a bill providing a refundable tax credit related to certain vehicle or technology expenses (HR.2749).
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01 · Background
Who they are, where they came from
Haley Maria Stevens represents Michigan's 11th congressional district, a seat she has held since January 3, 2019. Her district covers most of urbanized Oakland County, including many of Detroit's northern suburbs. She is a member of the Democratic Party and is currently a candidate in the 2026 U.S. Senate election in Michigan.
In the House, Stevens has sponsored legislation spanning science and technology investment, workforce development, and housing. On research and innovation, she has sponsored the Expanding Partnerships for Innovation and Competitiveness Act (HR.2582) and the DOE and NSF Interagency Research Act (HR.1350), which address federal research agency coordination and public-private innovation partnerships. On STEM education, she has sponsored the Accounting STEM Pursuit Act of 2023 (HR.3541), which attracted 50 to 99 cosponsors, and the Addressing Teacher Shortages Act of 2026 (HR.7883). On housing, she has sponsored the Fix Moldy Housing Act (HR.2746), the Healthy Affordable Housing Act (HR.2747), and the First Time Homeowner Savings Plan Act (HR.2748). On workforce and manufacturing, she has sponsored the Union Auto Workers Job Protection Act (HR.5338) and the RESTART Communities Act of 2026 (HR.8238). Additional sponsored measures include the SHIELD Act of 2025 (HR.5215), the AID Act (HR.7232), the Pell to Grad Act (HR.1635), the Wireless Electric Vehicle Charging Grant Program Act of 2025 (HR.1892), the IDEA Act of 2025 (HR.5826), the PROTECT Act of 2026 (HR.6990), the Thyroid Disease CARE Act of 2025 (HR.6897), and a bill to provide a refundable tax credit for certain expenses (HR.2749).
Stevens raised $1.56M this cycle, with 51.7% from individuals and 31.5% from PACs. Top PAC contributors include American Israel Public Affairs Political Action Committee ($27,500), Ford Motor Company Civic Action Fund, and the International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and Transportation Workers PAL. Itemized contributions account for 95.3% of individual giving, with top employer concentrations including Nyman Turkish PC, Mesirow, and several law firms including Liner Legal, LLC, NachtLaw, and Kirkendall Dwyer LLP. Outside spending in the cycle totaled $6.8M supporting Stevens — led by United Democracy Project ($3.9M) and Women Vote! ($2.9M) — and $808K opposing her, primarily from J Street Action Fund ($708K) and WFP National PAC ($100K).
Total raised · 2026
$1.6M
Cash on hand
$190
Spent
$2.3M
By source
Individuals$809K · 51.7%
PACs$492K · 31.5%
Individual donor mix
Small-donor share (under $200)4.7%
Top PAC contributors
AMERICAN ISRAEL PUBLIC AFFAIRS POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEEFEC ↗$28K
HONEYWELL INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEEFEC ↗$10K
AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEEFEC ↗$10K
Top employer concentrations
NYMAN TURKISH PC$21K· 6 donors
MESIROW$14K· 9 donors
DOVER DEVELOPMENT$7K· 2 donors
LINER LEGAL, LLC$7K· 2 donors
NACHTLAW$7K· 4 donors
KIRKENDALL DWYER LLP$7K· 2 donors
SCANLON PARTNERS LLC$7K· 2 donors
PROGRESSIVE METAL MANUFACTURING$7K· 2 donors
GPS INVESTMENT PARTNERS$7K· 2 donors
VENTAS$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.
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