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

Brian Jack

Republican · Representative, GA ·3
Score Components
24 ELEVATED
Connection Density 20%
0 → 0
Donor Influence 10%
0 → 0
Silence Risk 25%
10 → 3
Contradiction Risk 25%
64 → 16
Intelligence Volume 10%
53 → 5
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: Poverty rate: 9.0%
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Homeownership rate: 72.7%
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: White alone, not Hispanic or Latino: 64.8%
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Population: 785,402
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Median household income: $78,956
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[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Georgia Amendment 2 — Creation of Georgia Tax Court (2024) — passed, margin 51.7% yes to 48.3% no
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[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Georgia Amendment 1 — Local Option Homestead Property Tax Exemption (2024) — passed, margin 62.9% yes to 37.1% no
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[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Georgia Referendum — Property Tax Assessment Cap (limiting home value assessment increases to inflation rate) (2024) — passed, margin statewide majority yes
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 44-45 (share 0.138)
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 62 (share 0.155)
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 31-33 (share 0.175)
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Southwire Company (Carrollton) (8500 employees)
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Rinnai America Corporation (Griffin, Spalding County) (300 employees)
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Kia Motors Manufacturing Georgia (West Point) (2700 employees)
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[constituency_baseline] District summary: Georgia's 3rd Congressional District covers west-central Georgia, including the southern suburbs of Atlanta and the wealthier portions of Columbus and its northern suburbs. Encompassing all or part of 15 counties (Carroll, Coweta, Douglas, Fayette, Haralson, Harris, Heard, Henry, Lamar, Meriwether, Muscogee, Pike, Sp
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Voted sponsor on H.R. 4624 (Muhammad Ali American Boxing Revival Act) on 2026-03-24: Jack's signature bipartisan bill, the first boxing legislation to pass the House in 26 years (by voice vote). Endorsed by Mike Tyson and Muhammad Ali's widow Lonnie Ali. Critics argue the bill shifts power toward big promoters and foreign money at the expense of boxer protec
primary · 2026-03-24
Voted sponsor on H.R. 473 (SHOW UP Act (Stopping Home Office Work's Unproductive Problems)) on 2025-01-16: First bill Jack introduced in Congress, aimed at restoring in-person work at federal agencies to pre-pandemic levels. Aligned with Trump administration's return-to-office mandate and the DOGE subcommittee mission on which Jack serves.
primary · 2025-01-16
Voted yea on H.J. Res. 20 (Resolution to Repeal Biden-Era Tankless Water Heater Efficiency Regulation) on 2025-02-27: Jack led the bipartisan majority to pass this resolution, his first major legislative initiative affecting his district — protecting approximately 300 manufacturing jobs at Rinnai America Corporation in Spalding County. Passed 221-198 with 11
primary · 2025-02-27
Voted yea on H.R. 30 (Preventing Violence Against Women by Illegal Aliens Act) on 2025-01-16: Second vote cast by the freshman congressman. Supported legislation amending the Immigration and Nationality Act to make domestic violence and sex offenses committed by undocumented immigrants deportable. Passed 274-145.
primary · 2025-01-16
Voted yea on H.R. 33 (Protecting American Energy Production Act) on 2025-01-15: One of Jack's earliest votes prohibiting presidents from declaring moratoria on hydraulic fracturing without congressional approval. Consistent with his campaign pledge to 'end this war on hydrocarbons.' Passed 226-188.
primary · 2025-01-15
No connections mapped
BillVoteDateAlignment
Muhammad Ali American Boxing Revival Act sponsor 2026-03-24 deviating
One Big Beautiful Bill Act yea 2025-07-03 aligned
SAVE Act (Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act) yea 2025-04-10 deviating
Resolution to Repeal Biden-Era Tankless Water Heater Efficiency Regulation yea 2025-02-27 misaligned
Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act yea 2025-01-23 deviating
Preventing Violence Against Women by Illegal Aliens Act yea 2025-01-16 deviating
SHOW UP Act (Stopping Home Office Work's Unproductive Problems) sponsor 2025-01-16 deviating
Protecting American Energy Production Act yea 2025-01-15 aligned
Laken Riley Act yea 2025-01-07 deviating
Last contradiction analysis: Never
reversal 90/100
Platform: "During his 2024 campaign, Jack criticized the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), calling it a 'Green New Deal' and blaming it alongside 'h"
Vote: on "Jack voted for H.R. 1, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which the Congressional Budget Office project"
Jack campaigned in 2024 by attacking the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act as budget-busting 'Green New Deal' spending that drove up prices for working families, yet voted in 2025 for the OBBB — which the CBO projected would add $2.4 trillion to
statement_vs_disclosure 60/100
Platform: "On the House floor, Jack championed the 2025 Republican budget resolution as 'a win for blue-collar workers' and called on all members to support it '"
Vote: on "The GOP budget resolution that Jack championed slashed approximately $2 trillion from federal progra"
Jack defended the Republican budget resolution on the House floor as a defense of 'blue-collar American workers,' yet the resolution cut $2 trillion from Medicaid, SNAP, and student loans — programs on which many blue-collar families in his district
Last silence detection: Never
Constituent access through in-person town halls
453d silent
Expected position: As a freshman congressman who campaigned on a populist message of serving 'the incredible people of Georgia's 3rd Congressional District,' Jack would be expected to hold regular in-
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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