
Katherine Clark
Conflict Alerts
Instances where Katherine Clark's votes appear to benefit top campaign donors — the “say one thing, do another” pattern.
Took $20K from Pharmaceuticals & Health — voted against Medicare drug pricing and healthcare reform 4 times
Accepted $15K from Finance & Banking — voted against consumer financial protection legislation 2 times
How this works: Conflict Alerts are generated by cross-referencing campaign contribution data with key vote records. Severity is based on donation size ($100K+ = high). This is algorithmic analysis — not a determination of wrongdoing. Learn more →
Who Do They Work For?
DONOR CAPTUREDKatherine Clark's voting record shows 26 high-severity conflicts where votes aligned with top donor industries, with 46% of funding from PACs.
Received $1980K from Health, then voted Nay on HR498 (On Passage)Do No Harm in Medicaid ActThis bill prohibits federal Medicaid payment for specified gender transition procedures for individuals under the age of 18. The bill defines these procedures to mean those that are intended to change the body of an individual to no longer correspond to the individual's biological sex (male or female), including specified surgeries, implants, and medications (e.g., hormones).The bill excludes procedures that are provided to an individual under the age of 18 with the consent of a parent or legal guardian and that are intended to (1) rectify early puberty, genetic disorders, or chromosomal abnormalities; (2) reverse prior gender transition procedures; or (3) prevent imminent death or impairment of a major bodily function.
Received $1980K from Health, then voted Nay on HRES953 (On Ordering the Previous Question)
Based on FEC filings and cross-referencing donor industries with congressional votes. Methodology →
Represents You?
How Katherine's votes compare to what MA constituents actually want
Based on 7 scored votes across 5 policy areas
Protect ACA / Pre-existing Conditions
86% of MA residents support this•KFF Health Tracking Poll 2023
Federal Climate Legislation
82% of MA residents support this•Yale Climate Opinion Maps 2024
Medicare Drug Price Negotiation
89% of MA residents support this•KFF Health Tracking Poll 2023
Government Ethics & Transparency
88% of MA residents support this•Pew Research Center 2023
Lower Healthcare Costs
86% of MA residents support this•Gallup 2024
Constituent preferences from nationally representative polls (Gallup, KFF, Yale PCCC, Pew Research). State-level estimates use MRP modeling. Alignment scored on substantive Yea/Nay votes only.
💰 Campaign Finance
2024 Election Cycle • Source: Federal Election Commission
Raised $5.0M this cycle. Mixed funding sources — 46.2% from PACs, 3.2% from small donors.
Top donors:
Total Raised
$5.0M
Total Spent
$4.8M
Potential Conflicts of Interest
5 donor industries overlap with Katherine Clark's voting record across 26 votes.
Health donated $2.0M, then Katherine voted in alignment with that industry on 3 key bills.
Health
$2.0M in donations → 3 related votes
Voted Nay on HR498 — On Passage
Dec 18, 2025
Do No Harm in Medicaid ActThis bill prohibits federal Medicaid payment for specified gender transition procedures for individuals under the age of 18. The bill defines these procedures to mean those that are intended to change the body of an individual to no longer correspond to the individual's biological sex (male or female), including specified surgeries, implants, and medications (e.g., hormones).The bill excludes procedures that are provided to an individual under the age of 18 with the consent of a parent or legal guardian and that are intended to (1) rectify early puberty, genetic disorders, or chromosomal abnormalities; (2) reverse prior gender transition procedures; or (3) prevent imminent death or impairment of a major bodily function.
Benefits: States seeking to restrict gender transition procedures for minors, Conservative advocacy groups opposed to gender transition treatments, Parents who prefer to prevent their children from accessing gender transition procedures
Harms: Transgender and non-binary youth seeking gender transition procedures, Healthcare providers offering gender transition services to minors, Medicaid programs in states that would lose federal reimbursement for these procedures, Families with lower incomes who rely on Medicaid coverage for medical care
AI analysis of CRS summary
Voted Nay on HRES953 — On Ordering the Previous Question
Dec 17, 2025
No summary available — view bill on Congress.gov →
Lawyers/Law Firms
$1.6M in donations → 1 related vote
Voted Nay on HRES916 — On Ordering the Previous Question
Dec 2, 2025
No summary available — view bill on Congress.gov →
Conflicts detected by cross-referencing top donor industries (FEC data) with votes on related legislation (Congress.gov). Severity based on donation amounts. Not exhaustive — use as a starting point.
🗳️ Key Vote Record
Voted on 69 key issues: 25 Yea, 44 Nay.
How Katherine voted on important legislation
Key Votes
69
Yea
25
Nay
44
Participation
100%
Breaks w/ Party
0%
Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 7148) the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026; providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 7147) the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2026; and for other purposes
On Ordering the Previous Question
HRES1014Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 7148) the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026; providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 7147) the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2026; and for other purposes
On Agreeing to the Resolution, as Amended
HRES1014Making further consolidated appropriations for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2026, and for other purposes
On Passage
HR7147This bill provides FY2026 appropriations for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).Specifically, the bill provides appropriations to DHS for Departmental Management, Intelligence, Situational Awareness, and Oversight, includingthe Office of the Secretary and Executive Management;the Management Directorate;Intelligence, Analysis, and Situational Awareness; andthe Office of Inspector General.In addition, the bill provides appropriations for Security, Enforcement, and Investigations, includingU.S. Customs and Border Protection,U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement,the Transportation Security Administration,the U.S. Coast Guard, andthe U.S. Secret Service.The bill provides appropriations for Protection, Preparedness, Response, and Recovery, includingthe Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, andthe Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).The bill provides appropriations for Research, Development, Training, and Services, includingU.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services,the Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers, andthe Science and Technology Directorate.The bill also sets forth requirements and restrictions for using funds provided by this and other appropriations acts.
Benefits: Department of Homeland Security agencies and departments, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Transportation Security Administration, U.S. Coast Guard, U.S. Secret Service, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, Federal Emergency Management Agency, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Federal Law Enforcement Training Centers, DHS contractors and service providers
AI analysis of CRS summary
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026
On Passage
HR7148Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026This bill provides appropriations to several federal departments and agencies for the remainder of FY2026 and provides continuing FY2026 appropriations for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) through February 13, 2026. It also extends various expiring programs and authorities.Specifically, the bill includes 5 of the 12 regular FY2026 appropriations bills:the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2026;the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2026; the Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2026;the Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Act, 2026; andthe National Security, Department of State, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2026.The departments, agencies, and activities funded in the bill includethe Department of Defense,the Department of Labor,the Department of Health and Human Services,the Department of Education,the Department of Transportation,the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the Department of the Treasury,the Executive Office of the President,the judiciary,the District of Columbia,the Department of State and related programs,the administration and oversight of foreign assistance programs, bilateral economic assistance,international security assistance,multilateral assistance,export and investment assistance, andseveral related and independent agencies.In addition, the bill includes a continuing resolution (CR) that provides continuing FY2026 appropriations to DHS through the earlier of February 13, 2026, or the enactment of the DHS appropriations act. The CR funds most DHS programs and activities at the FY2025 levels.The bill also extends several expiring programs and authorities, includingthe U.S. Grain Standards Act;the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s whistleblower program;the National Flood Insurance Program;the Forest Service's participation in the Agriculture Conservation Experienced Services Program;the Transportation Security Administration’s Reimbursable Screening Services Program;the Motor Carrier Safety Advisory Committee;several authorities and programs related to cybersecurity;the technology modernization fund and board;the U.S. Parole Commission;the special assessment on nonindigent persons or entities convicted of certain offenses involving sexual abuse or human trafficking;several immigration-related programs and authorities;the authority for the U.S. Sentencing Commission to promulgate certain guidelines or amendments related to the use of unmanned aircraft; certain bankruptcy fees;trade preferences for Haiti and countries in sub-Saharan Africa;the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program; andseveral health care authorities and programs.
Financial Disclosures
6 financial disclosure filings on record (2020–2024).
Data from House Clerk Financial Disclosures • Official Source
⚠️ Scandals & Controversies
Verified incidents with sources
No verified incidents on record
This member has no documented scandals, ethics violations, or investigations meeting our sourcing requirements.
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