State influence profile · NE

Nebraska political money

31 federal politicians, $60.1M in PAC contributions received, and $950K in lobbying by in-state organizations — from FEC, Senate LDA, and USAspending.gov filings.

31
Politicians
$60.1M
Contributions
$950K
Lobbying
$201.9M
Contracts

Nebraska's three federal money flows

Campaign contributions received, lobbying spent by in-state organizations, and federal contracts awarded — side by side.

Contributions received$60.1MLobbying spent$950KContracts awarded$201.9M

Source: FEC, U.S. Senate LDA, and USAspending.gov As of 2023–2024

How Political Money Moves Through Nebraska

Nebraska (NE) shows three distinct federal money flows in the 2023-2024 reporting period: $60.1M in PAC contributions received by 31 tracked politicians from the state, $950K in federal lobbying expenditures reported by organizations headquartered in Nebraska, and $201.9M in federal contract awards flowing to in-state entities. Each channel is independently sourced — FEC filings for contributions, Senate LDA disclosures for lobbying, and USAspending.gov for contracts.

On the candidate side, Dan Osborn leads Nebraska's politicians in PAC receipts, and the 31 federal candidates tracked here span Senate and House races where organizational committees disclose every contribution above FEC thresholds. On the organization side, HDR, INC. ranks among the most politically active entities headquartered in the state when contributions, lobbying, and contracts are combined into a single influence metric. The top-ranked organizations above are ordered by combined influence footprint, not by any single channel.

Reading these three numbers side-by-side is what makes Nebraska's federal footprint legible: contributions signal which lawmakers in-state interests are prioritizing, lobbying expenditures signal which policy outcomes are being actively pursued, and contract dollars signal where federal procurement has already flowed back. Patterns visible in 2023-2024 filings will continue to shape Nebraska's federal posture through the next election cycle.

How to read the politician table: each row links to a candidate-level page where the full donor list, PAC affiliations, party identifier, and office sought are itemized. The "Total Received" column aggregates every itemized contribution above FEC reporting thresholds across the 2023-2024 reporting window, which spans both the 2024 general election cycle and the prior off-year fundraising period. Senate candidates raise across longer six-year cycles, so totals for incumbent senators may reflect carryforward fundraising from earlier years; House candidates raise on two-year cycles. Presidential candidates are tracked separately and may appear on the state-level page if their committee is registered to a Nebraska address.

How to read the organization table: rows are ordered by a combined influence footprint that sums campaign-contribution dollars with lobbying expenditures and federal contract awards over the same window. Each organization links to a detail page where the three channels are broken out separately so you can see, for instance, whether an entity primarily lobbies (heavy LDA filings, light FEC activity) or primarily contracts (USAspending.gov dollars dominate). Trade associations, corporate PACs, and registered lobbying firms all flow through the same combined metric — the detail page disambiguates which channel drives the ranking.

Source documents: FEC Form 3, 3X, and 5 filings ingested from the Commission's bulk download endpoint; Senate Office of Public Records LD-2 quarterly lobbying disclosures parsed from the Senate's XML feed; USAspending.gov contract award and obligation records sourced via the FEDERALAWARDS API. None of the numbers on this page are imputed or modeled — every dollar shown was disclosed by the filer themselves under federal reporting requirements. When a filer amends a prior disclosure, our next ETL pass picks up the amended record and supersedes the original.

A note on state-level totals and the limits of geographic attribution. PAC contributions are unambiguously state-level because every candidate registers their committee to a specific state. Lobbying expenditures, however, are reported at the registrant level — a Washington, DC-based lobbying firm representing a Nebraska client will disclose the lobbying engagement to the Senate without necessarily attributing the dollars to Nebraska; we attribute lobbying spend to Nebraska when the registrant declares its primary place of business in this state, which can understate the actual influence flow to or from clients in other states. Federal contract awards are attributed by the contractor's primary place of performance, not by where the buying agency is located. A defense contract executed in Nebraska but awarded by the Department of Defense in Virginia will appear under Nebraska's contract total. These conventions are explained in detail on our methodology page.

Politicians from Nebraska

Name Party Total Received
Dan Osborn I $20.9M
Donald J Bacon R $13.4M
Debra S. Fischer R $11.6M
Anthony 'tony' Vargas D $10.8M
Adrian Smith R $1.5M
Mike Flood R $1.1M
Pete Ricketts R $836K
Preston Jr Love D $41K
Kerry Eddy OTH $35K
Carol Blood D $22K
John Glen Lt Col Ret. Weaver R $230

Frequently Asked Questions

How much political money flows through Nebraska?

Nebraska politicians received $60.1M in PAC contributions during the 2024 election cycle, while organizations headquartered in the state spent $950K on federal lobbying and received $201.9M in federal contracts. Data comes from FEC filings, Senate LDA disclosures, and USAspending.gov.

How many politicians represent Nebraska at the federal level?

31 politicians from Nebraska are tracked in FEC filings for the 2024 cycle. This includes candidates for Senate and House seats. The top fundraiser is Dan Osborn. All data covers PAC and organizational contributions, not individual donations.

Which organizations have the most political influence in Nebraska?

HDR, INC. is among the top politically active organizations headquartered in Nebraska. Influence is measured by combining campaign contributions, lobbying expenditures, and federal contract awards. See the full organization rankings above.

What is the difference between contributions, lobbying, and contracts?

Campaign contributions are donations from PACs to political candidates (tracked by the FEC). Lobbying is spending to influence legislation and regulation (disclosed via Senate LDA filings). Federal contracts are government procurement awards to private companies (tracked by USAspending.gov). Together, these three channels represent the primary ways organizations exert financial influence in federal politics.

Where does Nebraska political money data come from?

All data is sourced from official federal government databases: the Federal Election Commission (campaign contributions), the Senate Office of Public Records (lobbying disclosures), and USAspending.gov (federal contracts). PlainInfluence aggregates and presents this public data for transparency. Data covers the 2023-2024 reporting period.

Data: FEC, Senate LDA, USAspending.gov. 2023-2024 data. Verify filings at fec.gov/data.

Related

Data sourced from official public datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainInfluence Editorial.