OutSpent
Independence Score
Jon Husted

Jon Husted

Republican · OH· In the Senate since 2025 (1 yr)

64C/ 100

A mix — some independence, some big money.

Why this grade

Every score is built from money facts you can check. Here's what drove it.

Who funds them63% of grade

11.1% of their money comes from small donors; 16.7% comes from PACs.

Their leadership PAC38% of grade

$196,000 in PAC money flows through their leadership PAC (JOBS OPPORTUNITY NOW POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE).

Where the money comes from

$157K

Career donations from the seven industries that most often buy influence, and the biggest names in each.

Banks & finance$70,500

Blackstone $34K · Goldman Sachs $26K · Am. Bankers Assn. $8K · Securities Industry $4K

Oil & energy$47,000

Marathon $45K · Am. Petroleum Inst. $2K

Big Tech$26,750

Oracle $14K · Microsoft $6K · Google $5K · Meta $2K

Real estate$7,000

Natl Assn of Realtors $5K · CBRE $2K

Pharma$4,500

PhRMA $3K · Johnson & Johnson $2K · Amgen $500

Telecom$1,000

AT&T $1K

Source: FEC career receipts. It's all legal. That's the point.

The money votes

On the Senate votes where concentrated money was on the line, here's which way they went. Sided with the money on 5 of 5.

Source: Senate roll-call records. “With the money” means the vote favored the industry whose cash was at stake. It's not a judgment of right or wrong.

How to read the grade

We grade money behavior, not party. Both parties run the full range. We show the averages in the open: the typical Democrat scores 68, the typical Republican 55. Source: FEC receipts (small-donor vs PAC) and leadership-PAC filings. Nothing here alleges a crime. The point is that it's all legal.

Yours?

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