Ciscomani has spent time focused on a few core fights. Each is tied to bills actually introduced or votes actually cast.
01
Supports federal appropriations through omnibus legislationCiscomani sponsored H.R.2882, the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024, which was enacted into law. The bill provided consolidated federal funding across multiple government departments and agencies for fiscal year 2024.
02
Supports expanded benefits and services for veteransCiscomani has sponsored multiple bills addressing veterans' access to services and benefits. H.R.3753 would expand access for online veteran students; H.R.3951 would improve benefits access for rural veterans; H.R.1458 addresses veterans' employment and training opportunities; H.R.668 would coordinate care for senior veterans and wounded warriors; and H.R.1228 would adjust survivors' benefit priorities.
03
Supports border security and law enforcement measuresCiscomani sponsored H.R.35, the Agent Raul Gonzalez Officer Safety Act, which addresses safety protections for law enforcement officers. He also sponsored H.R.263, the Transnational Criminal Organization Illicit Spotter Prevention and Elimination Act, which targets criminal organizations operating near the border.
04
Supports tribal water rights and Arizona land designationsCiscomani sponsored H.R.2025, the Northeastern Arizona Indian Water Rights Settlement Act of 2025, addressing water rights for tribal communities in northeastern Arizona. He also sponsored H.R.6380, the Chiricahua National Park Act, which would affect land designation in southern Arizona.
05
Supports oversight and access measures in federal healthcare programsCiscomani sponsored H.R.1598, the Ensuring Access to Medicaid Buy-in Programs Act, and H.R.3580, the Oversight of Medicare Billing Code Cost Act. Both bills address access and transparency within federal healthcare programs. He also sponsored H.R.336, the HEADWAY Act, and H.R.1055, the CONSTRUCTS Act of 2025, which address infrastructure and related federal program oversight.
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01 · Background
Who they are, where they came from
Juan Ciscomani represents Arizona's 6th congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives, a seat he has held since January 3, 2023. Before entering Congress, Ciscomani served as a senior adviser to Arizona Governor Doug Ducey and as vice chair of the Arizona-Mexico Commission. He was selected to deliver the Republican response to the 2023 State of the Union Address in Spanish. In his legislative work, Ciscomani has sponsored a broad range of measures addressing federal appropriations, border security, veterans' services, tribal water rights, and public lands. He sponsored H.R.2882, the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024, which was enacted into law. He has introduced legislation aimed at expanding educational access for student veterans (H.R.3753), improving benefits access for rural veterans (H.R.3951), and strengthening coordination of care for senior veterans and wounded warriors (H.R.668). On border and public safety, he sponsored the Agent Raul Gonzalez Officer Safety Act (H.R.35) and the Transnational Criminal Organization Illicit Spotter Prevention and Elimination Act (H.R.263). He has also sponsored the Northeastern Arizona Indian Water Rights Settlement Act of 2025 (H.R.2025) and the Chiricahua National Park Act (H.R.6380), addressing regional land and resource issues in Arizona.
02 · Recent significant work
What they’ve done lately
Apr 26, 2023Sponsored
Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024
Summary not yet generated.
Dec 3, 2025Sponsored
Chiricahua National Park Act
Summary not yet generated.
Oct 8, 2025Sponsored
TAAP Act
Summary not yet generated.
Jun 26, 2025Sponsored
To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 100 North Taylor Lane in Patagonia, Arizona, as the "Jim Kolbe Memorial Post Office".
Summary not yet generated.
Jun 12, 2025Sponsored
Rural Veterans’ Improved Access to Benefits Act of 2025
Ciscomani raised $5.1M this cycle, with 34.9% from individuals and 27.5% from PAC contributions; itemized contributions made up 77.9% of individual giving. Top PAC contributors include Ciscomani Victory Fund ($560K), Grow the Majority ($530K), Defend Our Majority ($260K), and Emmer Majority Builders ($178K). Top employer concentrations include HSL Properties, Cox Enterprises, and Winklevoss Capital Management. Outside spending totaled $3.3M supporting Ciscomani — led by FairShake ($1.6M), Congressional Leadership Fund ($856K), and Americans for Prosperity Action ($700K) — and $8.2M opposing him, led by HMP ($3.5M), DCCC ($2.4M), and Giffords PAC ($1.1M), all in independent expenditures separate from contributions to his own campaign.
ASSOCIATED BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS, INC. PAC (ABC PAC)FEC ↗$10K
Top employer concentrations
HSL PROPERTIES$29K· 11 donors
COX ENTERPRISES$22K· 17 donors
ENTREPRENEUR$21K· 7 donors
INFORMATION REQUESTED$19K· 9 donors
WINDMILL WINERY$14K· 5 donors
COTTONWOOD PROPERTIES$14K· 5 donors
WINKLEVOSS CAPITAL MANAGEMENT$14K· 4 donors
HYDRONALIX$14K· 4 donors
JIM CLICK AUTOMOTIVE$14K· 4 donors
STARKEY HEARING TECHNOLOGIES$14K· 4 donors
Self-reported employer data. Categories like “Retired” and “Not Employed” are excluded — these reflect demographic patterns rather than industry concentrations.
SEIU COPE (SERVICE EMPLOYEES INTERNATIONAL UNION COMMITTEE ON POLITICAL EDUCATION)FEC ↗$28K
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 Juan Ciscomani is a good or bad official— that’s your call. We just make the facts easy to find.