Weber has spent years focused on a few core fights. Each is tied to bills actually introduced or votes actually cast.
01
Opposes Iran's regional conduct and terrorismWeber sponsored H.RES.1148, a House resolution condemning the Iranian regime for terrorism, regional proxy warfare, and internal suppression. The resolution attracted more than 200 cosponsors and advanced through committee, reflecting a consistent focus on Iran-related foreign policy.
02
Votes against continuing appropriations resolutionsWeber voted against final passage of multiple continuing appropriations measures that became law, including H.R.6363, H.R.7463, H.R.2872, H.R.9747, H.R.5860, and the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024 (H.R.2670). In each case his vote was recorded against the majority position of his party.
03
Supports federal energy efficiency standardsWeber sponsored H.R.4663, the Federal Mechanical Insulation Act, which would establish requirements for mechanical insulation in federal buildings and facilities. The bill was referred to committee and drew between 50 and 99 cosponsors, indicating notable support for the measure.
04
Supports improved pay for federal correctional officersWeber has reintroduced H.R.4008, the Pay Our Correctional Officers Fairly Act, which would adjust compensation for federal correctional officers. The bill has been referred to committee in multiple sessions, reflecting a recurring legislative priority around federal law enforcement workforce compensation.
05
Pursues consumer and postal transparency measuresWeber has reintroduced H.R.5290, the Cable Transparency Act, addressing disclosure requirements in the cable industry, and H.R.1760, the USPS Act, related to U.S. Postal Service operations. Both measures have been reintroduced across multiple Congresses and referred to committee.
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01 · Background
Who they are, where they came from
Randy K. Weber, Sr. represents Texas's 14th congressional district in the U.S. House of Representatives, a seat he has held since January 3, 2013. Before serving in Congress, he was a member of the Texas House of Representatives, where he represented the 29th district. He is a businessman and a member of the Republican Party.
In the House, Weber has sponsored legislation addressing foreign policy, energy efficiency, consumer transparency, federal workforce compensation, and postal operations. He sponsored H.RES.1148, a resolution condemning the Iranian regime's terrorism, regional proxy warfare, and internal suppression. On energy, he introduced H.R.4663, the Federal Mechanical Insulation Act, which would establish standards for mechanical insulation in federal facilities. He also introduced H.R.5290, the Cable Transparency Act, and H.R.1760, the USPS Act, both reintroduced measures addressing consumer and postal policy respectively. H.R.4008, the Pay Our Correctional Officers Fairly Act, would adjust compensation for federal correctional officers, and H.R.1360, the Officer John Barnes Act, addresses matters related to law enforcement recognition.
On appropriations, Weber voted against multiple continuing resolution packages that became law, including H.R.6363, H.R.7463, H.R.2872, H.R.9747, H.R.5860, and H.R.2670, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2024, in each instance voting against the majority of his party. He also voted against H.R.3354, a postal facility designation measure, and S.2861, the Billie Jean King Congressional Gold Medal Act.
02 · Recent significant work
What they’ve done lately
Apr 15, 2024Sponsored
Condemning the Iranian regime's terrorism, regional proxy war, internal suppression, and for other purposes.
PAC contributions account for 43.8% of Weber's receipts this cycle, with individuals providing 25.6% — almost entirely from itemized contributions (99.1% of individual giving). The top PAC contributor is Weber Victory Fund, a joint fundraising committee, at $183,068; other named PAC contributors include American Israel Public Affairs Committee Political Action Co ($35,801), Space Exploration Technologies Corp. PAC ($15,000), ExxonMobil Corp. PAC ($6,500), and Valero Energy Corporation Political Action Committee ($5,000). Top employer concentrations among individual donors include Trans-Global Solutions Inc., Garver Real Estate, and Blackstone Inc. Outside spending in the cycle totaled $168,512 supporting Weber (Americans for Tax Reform at $150,000, Republican Party of Texas at $18,512) and $155,032 opposing him (Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee at $92,995, House Majority PAC at $62,037), in independent expenditures separate from contributions to his own campaign.
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 Randy Weber is a good or bad official— that’s your call. We just make the facts easy to find.