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[CAPTURE PORTAL] 119TH CONGRESS
// Legislative Integrity Monitor
Goblin House Intelligence
CongressOfficials → Alan Armstrong

Alan Armstrong

Republican · Senator, OK
Score Components
6 LOW
Connection Density 20%
0 → 0
Donor Influence 10%
0 → 0
Silence Risk 25%
0 → 0
Contradiction Risk 25%
0 → 0
Intelligence Volume 10%
55 → 6
Constituency Deviation 5%
0 → 0
Voting Misalignment 5%
0 → 0
% = weight in composite score · Raw component 0–100 × weight = weighted contribution (→) · Sum of contributions = overall score. Hover a row for details.
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Oil & Gas Share of State GDP: 19% ($58.2B)
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Population (2024 estimate): ~4.09 million
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Poverty Rate (2024): 14.9%
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Median Household Income (2024): $65,310
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[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: State Question 833 - Public Infrastructure Districts (2024) — failed, margin rejected by voters
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[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: State Question 834 - Citizenship Requirement for Voting (2024) — passed, margin ~80% yes
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 531 - Real Estate (share 0.11)
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 92 - Government (share 0.125)
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 211 - Oil and Gas Extraction (share 0.19)
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Williams Companies (5800 employees)
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Hobby Lobby (8300 employees)
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Integris Health (11500 employees)
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Amazon (14500 employees)
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Walmart (38000 employees)
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[constituency_baseline] District summary: Oklahoma is a deeply red state (Trump won ~66% in 2024) with a population of approximately 4.09 million. The oil and natural gas industry is the dominant economic driver, contributing $58.2 billion to state GDP (19% of total) and supporting over 304,000 jobs. Median household income is about $65,310, well below the n
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Voted nay on S.Con.Res. 33 / S.Amdt. 5333 (To establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to requiring the obligation of amounts appropriated to FEMA for public assistance and hazard mitigation programs.) on 2026-04-23: Voted against a FEMA funding measure; Oklahoma is prone to tornadoes and severe weather, making disaster-mitigation funding directly r
primary · 2026-04-23
Voted yea on S.Con.Res. 33 / S.Amdt. 5414 (To provide reconciliation instructions relating to photo ID requirements for voting in federal elections and election-day ballot counting.) on 2026-04-23: Supported stricter voter ID and election-counting rules; Oklahoma voters overwhelmingly passed a similar state constitutional amendment (SQ 834) in 2024 by ~80%.
primary · 2026-04-23
Voted nay on S.Con.Res. 33 / S.Amdt. 5235 (To establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to the impacts of hedge fund ownership of single-family homes and rent prices.) on 2026-04-23: Voted with party majority against addressing hedge fund influence on housing costs, notable for a senator from a state with a 14.9% poverty rate where affordable housing
primary · 2026-04-23
Alan Armstrong, as Williams CEO, held approximately 1,535,717 shares of Williams Companies stock worth an estimated $41.15M, and sold an estimated $47.88M worth of shares over six years.
secondary · 2023-11-27
Williams Companies spent $1,260,000 on federal lobbying in 2024, and its affiliates contributed $836,702 in total political contributions that cycle.
primary · 2024-12-31
No connections mapped
BillVoteDateAlignment
Concurrent Resolution on the budget, as amended yea 2026-04-23 aligned
Schiff amendment on the budget resolution nay 2026-04-23 aligned
Paul amendment on the budget resolution nay 2026-04-23 aligned
Kennedy amendment waiver on the budget resolution yea 2026-04-23 aligned
To establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to the impacts of hedge fun nay 2026-04-23 deviating
To provide reconciliation instructions relating to photo ID requirements for vot yea 2026-04-23 deviating
To establish a deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to requiring the obligation nay 2026-04-23 misaligned
Last contradiction analysis: Never
No contradictions detected
Last silence detection: Never
No active silences
No donor interests mapped
No constituency baseline modelled
No platform commitments archived
No committee memberships recorded
Scoring Methodology

The Capture Risk Score is a composite 0–100 index measuring potential regulatory capture of elected officials. It is computed from seven weighted components:

ComponentWeightSignal
Silence Risk25%Topics where donors have interests but the official is silent
Contradiction Risk25%Stated positions contradicted by voting record (recent findings boosted)
Connection Density20%Mapped relationships to lobbyists, contractors, interest groups
Intelligence Volume10%Documented facts from verified sources (logarithmic scale)
Donor Influence10%Distinct donors with interests overlapping committee jurisdiction
Constituency Deviation5%Gap between district priorities and legislative focus
Voting Misalignment5%Floor votes contradicting stated platform positions

Each component produces a raw score 0–100. The weighted sum yields the overall score. Tier thresholds: Critical ≥ 45, High ≥ 36, Elevated ≥ 22, Moderate ≥ 10, Low < 10.

Officials without at least 2 documented facts, 1 contradiction analysis, 1 voting record, or 1 constituency baseline are marked Insufficient Evidence and excluded from numeric ranking.

Contradiction findings from the last 180 days receive a recency boost. High-severity contradictions (score ≥ 70) receive additional weight.

Full methodology: /congress/methodology

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