Trips

House & Senate travel disclosures
Chamber
DatesAmount
PersonFunderDestinationDatesAmountSource
Andrew C. LockNew York Center for Foreign Policy AffairsKuala Lumpur, MalaysiaMay 29 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
James A. CooperAspen InstituteGeneva, SwitzerlandMay 29 – Jun 5, 2022Pending
Scott FriedmanNew York Center for Foreign Policy AffairsKuala Lumpur, MalaysiaMay 29 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
Claire S. OsbornNew York Center for Foreign Policy AffairsKuala Lumpur, MalaysiaMay 29 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
Ruben A. Goddard Jr.Rebuilding AllianceTel AvivMay 28 – Jun 5, 2022Pending
John R. CurtisUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace FoundationKyoto, JapanMay 28 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
August PflugerUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace FoundationKyoto, JapanMay 28 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
Deborah K. RossUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace FoundationTokyo, JapanMay 28 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
Raul RuizUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace FoundationKyoto, JapanMay 28 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
John R. CurtisUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace FoundationTokyo, JapanMay 28 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
August PflugerUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace FoundationTokyo, JapanMay 28 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
Darren SotoUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace Foundation USA.Kyoto, JapanMay 28 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
Larry D. BucshonU.S. Association of Former Members of Congress (FMC)Tokyo, JapanMay 28 – Jun 2, 2022Pending
Ruben A. Goddard Jr.Rebuilding AllianceJerusalemMay 28 – Jun 5, 2022Pending
Ruben A. Goddard Jr.Rebuilding AllianceWest BankMay 28 – Jun 5, 2022Pending
Deborah K. RossUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace FoundationKyoto, JapanMay 28 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
Darren SotoUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace Foundation USA.Tokyo, JapanMay 28 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
Raul RuizUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace FoundationTokyo, JapanMay 28 – Jun 4, 2022Pending
Izmira V. AitchRebuilding AllianceTel AvivMay 27 – Jun 7, 2022Pending
Izmira V. AitchRebuilding AllianceJerusalemMay 27 – Jun 7, 2022Pending
Diana DegetteUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace FoundationTokyo, JapanMay 27 – Jun 6, 2022Pending
Izmira V. AitchRebuilding AllianceWest BankMay 27 – Jun 7, 2022Pending
Amber M. MilenkevichRebuilding AllianceTel AvivMay 27 – Jun 5, 2022Pending
Diana DegetteUnited States Association of Former Members of Congress and Sasakawa Peace FoundationKyoto, JapanMay 27 – Jun 6, 2022Pending
Diana DegetteU.S. Association of Former Members of Congress (FMC)JapanMay 27 – Jun 6, 2022Pending

11,431 results · page 379 of 458 · 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.