[ Enter Database → ]
[CAPTURE PORTAL] 119TH CONGRESS
// Legislative Integrity Monitor
Goblin House Intelligence
CongressOfficials → Kelly Morrison

Kelly Morrison

Democratic · Representative, MN ·3
Score Components
17 MODERATE
Connection Density 20%
0 → 0
Donor Influence 10%
0 → 0
Silence Risk 25%
0 → 0
Contradiction Risk 25%
46 → 12
Intelligence Volume 10%
51 → 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: Cook Partisan Voting Index: D+17
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: unemployment rate: 3.6%
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: foreign-born population: 13.2% (93,300 people)
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median age: 40.7
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: bachelor's degree or higher: 51.8%
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: homeownership rate: 73.0%
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: poverty rate: 4.1–6.6%
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median household income: $109,478
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Minnesota Constitutional Amendment — Renew Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund (Lottery Revenue) (2024) — passed, margin 76% Yes — 24% No
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 54 (share 0.11)
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 52 (share 0.12)
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 62 (share 0.17)
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Cargill, Inc. (Wayzata HQ) (5000 employees)
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Target Corporation (Minneapolis HQ) (8500 employees)
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Medtronic, Inc. (Minneapolis area) (9000 employees)
secondary
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: UnitedHealth Group (Minnetonka HQ) (10000 employees)
secondary
[constituency_baseline] District summary: Minnesota's 3rd Congressional District encompasses the western and southern suburbs of Minneapolis, stretching across portions of Hennepin, Carver, and Anoka counties. Home to approximately 708,294 constituents, the district is one of the wealthiest and most educated in the country with a median household income of $
secondary
Voted nay on H.R. 22 (SAVE Act (Safeguard American Voter Eligibility)) on 2025-04-10: Morrison voted nay on legislation requiring documentary proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote. The AFL-CIO opposed the bill as creating burdensome barriers to voting access. The bill passed 220-208, largely along party lines. Morrison's vote aligned with Democratic
primary · 2025-04-10
Voted nay on H.Res. 189 (Censuring Representative Al Green of Texas) on 2025-03-06: Morrison voted with 198 Democrats against censuring Rep. Al Green for disrupting Trump's address to Congress. The vote passed 224-198 with only 10 Democrats defecting. Morrison's nay was party-consistent.
primary · 2025-03-06
Voted nay on H.R. 9745 (DHS Funding Continuing Resolution (January 2026)) on 2026-01-22: Morrison opposed Homeland Security funding, stating: 'We cannot give one more penny to ICE as long as this lawless agency is violating Americans' Constitutional rights.' She co-sponsored legislation to ban ICE warehouse detention facilities and was vocal against DHS fund
primary · 2026-01-22
No connections mapped
BillVoteDateAlignment
DHS Funding Continuing Resolution (January 2026) nay 2026-01-22 mixed
One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) nay 2025-07-03 aligned
SAVE Act (Safeguard American Voter Eligibility) nay 2025-04-10 aligned
Censuring Representative Al Green of Texas nay 2025-03-06 deviating
Illegitimate Court Counteraction Act (ICC Sanctions) nay 2025-01-09 deviating
Laken Riley Act nay 2025-01-07 deviating
Last contradiction analysis: Never
statement_vs_disclosure 90/100
Platform: "Morrison campaigns as a champion of ethics reform and government accountability, co-sponsoring the DISCLOSE Act of 2026. She stated 'even the appearan"
Vote: on "Morrison violated the STOCK Act by failing to timely disclose between $1.4 million and $2.9 million "
Morrison publicly denounces 'unfathomable levels of corruption and self-enrichment' in Washington while simultaneously violating the STOCK Act and trading venture-capital stocks with privileged access unavailable to ordinary Americans. Government eth
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

View Full Entity Profile →