Moore's subcommittee assignment to Digital Assets aligns with his legislative advocacy: he holds a 100% pro-crypto score from Stand With Crypto and voted for both the CLARITY Act and GENIUS Act in 2025.
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· 2025-07-17
Since being sworn into Congress on January 3, 2025, Moore executed over 150 individual stock trades in sectors including technology, healthcare, and financial services—all of which fall under the jurisdiction of his Financial Services subcommittees.
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· 2025-11-19
Rep. Tim Moore was named Vice Chair of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations and assigned to the Subcommittee on Digital Assets, Financial Technology and Artificial Intelligence on January 14, 2025, as part of the 119th Congress committee organization announced by Chairman French Hill.
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· 2025-01-14
Moore invested in Intel stock on July 29, 2025, 24 days before Trump announced a major Intel partnership, and in Centene and UnitedHealth stock shortly before key healthcare votes—making him the most prolific stock trader in the NC delegation with over 150 trades since taking office.
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· 2025-08-22
Moore's 2023-2024 campaign top industry donor was Real Estate at $252,961, followed by Retired ($178,037) and Lawyers/Law Firms ($142,367), with only 2.19% of contributions coming from small donors under $200—ranking him near the bottom among NC House members for small-donor support.
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· 2024-12-31
North Carolina's Medicaid expansion, passed in December 2023, contains a statutory 'trigger' in the Access to Healthcare Options Act (H76) that automatically discontinues expansion if the federal government reduces its 90% funding share—a trigger that state Medicaid officials warned would be activated by the OBBBA's work requirements and provider tax freeze.
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· 2025-06-27
The Congressional Budget Office determined the One Big Beautiful Bill Act would add $3 trillion to the national debt over a decade when including $551 billion in increased interest costs, and would cut federal Medicaid spending by approximately $1 trillion and SNAP by $187 billion over the same period.
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· 2025-06-05
Tim Moore voted Aye on Roll Call 190 (H.R. 1, One Big Beautiful Bill Act) on July 3, 2025, as recorded by the Clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives—the vote passed 218-214 with all 218 voting Republicans in favor and 212 Democrats plus 2 Republicans opposed.
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· 2025-07-03
Section 1110 (Norcross Amendment) was included in H.R. 3838 via the House Armed Services Committee markup on July 15, 2025, approved with bipartisan support including Republican Reps. Don Bacon and Derrick Van Orden. Rep. Bob Onder's amendment to strip Section 1110 was pulled from floor consideration before the September 10 vote, avoiding a recorded vote on
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· 2025-09-10
Within four months of the Lumbee Tribe securing full federal recognition through the NDAA (signed into law December 18, 2025), the tribe proposed a constitutional amendment to authorize casino gaming on tribal lands on April 16, 2026. The tribal council approved the proposal 17-2. This creates a direct line from Moore's co-sponsored NDAA amendment to potenti
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· 2026-04-16
Moore voted AYE on the December 10, 2025 rule (H.Res. ___) providing for consideration of S. 1071, the conference version of the NDAA from which Section 1110 (collective bargaining restoration) had been stripped. The CWA scored this vote as 'Wrong' — against working people — because the pro-union provision Moore had supported in September was removed. Moore
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· 2025-12-10
Moore voted AYE on Roll Call 262 for final passage of H.R. 3838 (FY26 NDAA) on September 10, 2025. The House Clerk's official roll call confirms his vote as 'Aye' — 214 Republicans supported the bill while 4 opposed, placing Moore firmly within the GOP majority. The prior 'yea_unverified' designation is superseded by primary evidence.
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· 2025-09-10
The Farm Bill maintained work requirements for able-bodied adults for food stamps, prevented undocumented immigrants from accessing SNAP, and required more frequent eligibility checks — provisions consistent with Moore's public framing of the bill as reducing fraud.
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· 2026-04-30
Moore held zero public town halls from his January 2025 swearing-in through at least October 2025, as documented by NC Newsline and Yahoo News, while constituents organized at least three empty-chair events in Shelby and Kings Mountain to discuss SNAP cuts, Medicaid, and federal funding concerns.
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· 2025-10-20
Moore argued SNAP funding reductions were 'an incentive for states to root out waste, fraud, and abuse' and that states reducing their SNAP payment error rate below 6% would have funding restored, according to a spokeswoman statement to WRAL News.
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· 2025-08-13
Cleveland County, entirely within NC-14, has 23,789 SNAP recipients (24.3% of population) — nearly one in four residents — making it one of the most SNAP-dependent counties represented by a Republican in North Carolina's congressional delegation.
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· 2023-07
Tim Moore voted Yea on H.R. 7567, the Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026 (Roll Call 154), which passed 224-200 on April 30, 2026, codifying $187 billion in SNAP cuts originally enacted through H.R. 1.
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· 2026-04-30
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: 2024 general election result (Moore vs. Genant): Moore 58.5% – Genant 41.5%
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Mean commute time: 26.1 minutes
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[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Drive alone to work: 72.3%
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Last contradiction analysis: Never
Platform: "As North Carolina House Speaker from 2015–2024, Tim Moore repeatedly blocked Medicaid expansion that would have covered 600,000 uninsured North Caroli"
Vote: on "When North Carolina finally expanded Medicaid in December 2023, Moore reversed course and took credi"
Moore spent nearly a decade as NC House Speaker blocking Medicaid expansion for 600,000 residents, then took credit when it passed — only to vote for H.R. 1 in Congress, which threatens to trigger the clause ending coverage for 680,000 North Carolini
Platform: "Moore voted for H.R. 1 and called it the 'Working Families Tax Cut,' stating it 'delivers real results for the American people by locking in the large"
Vote: on "The Congressional Budget Office projected H.R. 1 would add approximately $3 trillion to the national"
Moore publicly characterized H.R. 1 as a 'Working Families Tax Cut' that would 'strengthen Medicaid,' while the CBO projected it would add trillions to the debt, cut $1 trillion from Medicaid, and slash SNAP — directly harming the working families he
Platform: "A Washington-based watchdog group, the Campaign for Accountability, filed ethics complaints in 2018 and 2019 alleging Moore improperly intervened with"
Vote: on "Moore called the allegations 'a meritless election-year political ploy' and stated 'the Siler City p"
[auto-downgraded: both claims come from the same source host] Moore dismissed two ethics complaints about his property dealings as 'meritless' and a 'political ploy,' but the underlying facts — a state ethics investigation and the Campaign for Accoun