2025–2027 term scorecard
Jr. kept 57% of 14 promises tracked for the 2025–2027 term. Each verdict is term-scoped, primary-sourced, and reviewed by three sequential reviewers (neutral · conservative · progressive).
Rep. James Robert Comer Jr. (R-KY) has kept 8 of 14 graded campaign promises, a 57% record. One key promise broken: he pledged to "Hold the line on federal spending" but voted for spending measures that contradicted that stance. He kept partial credit on 5 other promises, suggesting mixed follow-through on his stated agenda.
We don't yet have detailed donor data or vote-by-vote alignment showing which industries funded him and how those contributions may have influenced his legislative choices. A complete picture of who funds his campaigns and whether those donors' interests align with his votes would help voters assess potential influence.
Narrated from FEC + Congress.gov receipts. Every figure traces to our data.
Jr. kept 57% of 14 promises tracked for the 2025–2027 term. Each verdict is term-scoped, primary-sourced, and reviewed by three sequential reviewers (neutral · conservative · progressive).
Standard review · primary sources, single editorial pass.
James Robert Comer Jr.'s top donor industry: Big Tech ($10K, cycle 2024). Source: campaignreceipts.com/r/james-comer
FEC bulk filings, cycle 2024.
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Each promise below has its own Receipt — verdict, primary-source quotes, paper-trail pointers, and a case study. Linkable individually by Receipt ID for citation.
Voted YES on the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (December 2017). Has consistently supported TCJA-extension framework.
Voted YES on Justices Gorsuch (2017), Kavanaugh (2018), and Barrett (2020). Dobbs (2022) overturned Roe with all three in the majority.
Voted NO on the Women's Health Protection Act. Supported confirmation of pro-life justices who overturned Roe.
Voted NO on most federal gun-control measures during tenure. NRA rating A or A+.
Voted YES on H.R. 2 framework. Position on the February 2024 Bipartisan Border Bill varied; comprehensive enforcement legislation did not pass during the Biden administration.
Voted to expedite energy permitting and against Biden-era leasing restrictions. U.S. became net energy exporter (2019).
Voted YES on TCJA (CBO-projected $1.9T deficit) and CARES Act ($2.2T). National debt rose substantially during tenure.
Voted NO on the Respect for Marriage Act (citing religious-liberty concerns) and supported religious-liberty appropriations provisions.
Voted YES on Israel aid packages. Co-sponsored multiple Israel-support measures.
Voted yes on Trump nominees including AG, SecDef, DNI, Treasury during the 119th Congress.
Voted no on most Biden judicial nominees in minority. Could not block confirmation of Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson (April 2022, 53-47).
Multiple bills introduced restricting federal funds to sanctuary jurisdictions; none reached final passage during the term.
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James Robert Comer Jr.'s biggest donor industries are Individual / Retired ($1,810,468), and Big Tech ($10,000). Every dollar is tied to an FEC filing.
See James Robert Comer Jr.'s full donor breakdown →