Trips

House & Senate travel disclosures
Chamber
DatesAmount
PersonFunderDestinationDatesAmountSource
Lily A. DouthittSouth Florida Agricultural FoundationWest Palm Beach, FLOct 11 – Oct 14, 2022Pending
Sam HattrupAmerican Exploration and Production Council, Coterra Energy, Inc.Tunkhannock, PAOct 11 – Oct 13, 2022Pending
William D. SittonSouth Florida Agricultural FoundationClewiston, FLOct 11 – Oct 14, 2022Pending
Elise S. KrekorianAmerican Exploration and Production Council and Coterra EnergyTunkhannock, PAOct 11 – Oct 13, 2022Pending
Hali R. GruberSouth Florida Agricultural FoundationClewiston, FLOct 11 – Oct 14, 2022Pending
Victoria Alexandra MalochSouth Florida Agricultural Foundation,Clewiston, FLOct 11 – Oct 14, 2022Pending
Erin E. WilsonSouth Florida Agricultural FoundationClewiston, FLOct 11 – Oct 14, 2022Pending
Erin E. WilsonSouth Florida Agricultural FoundationWest Palm Beach, FLOct 11 – Oct 14, 2022Pending
John V. TommasiniAmerican Exploration and Production Council and Coterra EnergTunkhannock, PAOct 11 – Oct 13, 2022Pending
Melissa A. BellinAspen Institute, Bill & Melinda Gates FoundationStevensville, MDOct 11 – Oct 13, 2022Pending
Matthew P. PerriconeAmerican Exploration & Production CouncilTunkhannock, PAOct 11 – Oct 13, 2022Pending
Jeffrey O. BishopAmerican Exploration and Production Council, Coterra Energy, Inc.Tunkhannock, PAOct 11 – Oct 13, 2022Pending
Thomas M. ReynoldsAmerican Exploration Production Council and Coterra EnergyTunkhannock, PAOct 11 – Oct 13, 2022Pending
Jordan E. PakulaUnknownUnknownOct 10 – Oct 15, 2022Pending
Katie MorleyWoodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and Carnegie Corporation of New YorkCanadaOct 10 – Oct 16, 2022Pending
Olivia M. ElkinsUnknownUnknownOct 10 – Oct 15, 2022Pending
Robert C. JulienUnknownUnknownOct 10 – Oct 15, 2022Pending
Dorothy ClarkWoodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Carnegie Corporation of New YorkIcelandOct 10 – Oct 15, 2022Pending
Katie MorleyWoodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and Carnegie Corporation of New YorkIcelandOct 10 – Oct 16, 2022Pending
Dhishal P. JayasingheUnknownUnknownOct 10 – Oct 15, 2022Pending
Dorothy ClarkWoodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Carnegie Corporation of New YorkCanada,Oct 10 – Oct 15, 2022Pending
Yazeed T. AbdelhaqUnknownUnknownOct 10 – Oct 15, 2022Pending
Alexandra S. HellerWoodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and Carnegie Corporation of New YorkCanada and IcelandOct 10 – Oct 15, 2022Pending
Baillee J. BrownThirdway FoundationUnited KingdomOct 9 – Oct 15, 2022Pending
Rebecca A. CallahanThirdway FoundationUnited KingdomOct 9 – Oct 15, 2022Pending

11,581 results · page 344 of 464 · 25 per page

Context

What these trip disclosures are and why they matter

These records describe privately funded congressional travel disclosures. They generally show who took the trip, who funded it, where it went, when it happened, and the reported dollar amount.

The filings exist because congressional travel backed by outside organizations is subject to disclosure rules. The goal is transparency: the public should be able to see when outside entities are paying for trips connected to members of Congress or congressional staff.

That matters because travel can reveal patterns of access, influence, and relationship-building that do not show up in ordinary legislative data. Looking across funders, destinations, amounts, and repeat travelers can help users understand who is funding proximity to Capitol Hill and how often.

How to read the data

  • Use the funder and amount filters to narrow in on specific outside funders.
  • Open linked people and funder pages to trace repeat relationships over time.
  • Use source links to review the filing provenance behind each disclosure row.