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[ENTITY FILE] SUBJECT-10895 PERSON ACTIVE
GC
// Subject

Greg Casar‍​​​‌‌‍​​​‍‌​‌​​​​‍‍​‍

US Representative (D-TX-35)
Tracked Sitting member of the House; tracked for votes, donor mapping, and committee oversight.
Facts on record19
Connections mapped0
Sources cited9
Stated vs Revealed
No documented contradictions on file.
TIMELINE Role Overlap Visualizer →
Facts (19)
Data Freshness
Fresh Last update: 6d ago · Avg age: 6d
Confidence Tiers: Primary Source — cross-referenced government/corporate filings Pending Review — sourced but not independently verified AI Inference — analytical hypothesis from cross-referencing
Raw Filing Records (19) — unsourced metadata
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic an‍​​​‌‌‍​​​‍‌​‌​​​​‍‍​‍chor: Hispanic population share: 53.7%
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demogra‍​​​‌‌‍​​​‍‌​‌​​​​‍‍​‍phic anchor: Poverty rate: 16.3%
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic an‍​​​‌‌‍​​​‍‌​‌​​​​‍‍​‍chor: Median household income: $73,088
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: 2024 Texas Proposition 4 (Property Tax Relief) (2024) — passed, margin 70%–30%
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: 2022 Texas Proposition 1 (Homestead Exemption Increase) (2022) — passed, margin 85%–15%
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 54 (share 0.09)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 62 (share 0.11)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 44-45 (share 0.12)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: Tesla (Gigafactory Texas) (22000 employees)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: H-E-B (18000 employees)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: University of Texas at Austin (20000 employees)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] District summary: Texas's 35th congressional district (TX‑35) is a heavily urban/suburban, majority-minority district anchored along the I‑35 corridor from East Austin through Hays County to the West Side of San Antonio. Hispanic residents make up 53.7% of the population, followed by White (39.6%) and Black (12.1%). The district is younger than the national average (median age 33) and has a significant immigrant population (16.8% foreign‑born). Housing affordability is a persistent challenge, with a homeownership rate of only 52.8% and median rent of $1,495.
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Voted nay on H.R.8034 (Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024) on 2024-04-20: Casar was one of 37 Democrats to vote against providing $14 billion in offensive military aid to Israel. His district's Democratic-leaning, majority-minority constituency is broadly skeptical of foreign military spending, yet the vote put him in the minority of the party and in opposition to most Texas Democratic House members.
Date: 2024-04-20 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Voted nay on H.R.3746 (Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 (debt ceiling deal)) on 2023-05-31: Casar joined 46 progressive Democrats in opposing the bipartisan debt ceiling deal that a majority of the party supported (165 yea). He argued the bill imposed harmful spending cuts on working families. This vote put him at odds with House Democratic leadership while aligning with the Congressional Progressive Caucus whip position.
Date: 2023-05-31 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Voted present on H.Res.771 (Standing with Israel as it defends itself against the barbaric war launched by Hamas and other terrorists) on 2023-10-25: Casar voted 'present' rather than 'yea' or 'nay,' a middle-ground stance that avoided fully endorsing the resolution while also not opposing it outright. This positioned him between progressive activists critical of Israeli military actions and the overwhelming bipartisan majority (412 yea) that backed the measure.
Date: 2023-10-25 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [statement] In March 2026, after a deadly shooting in Austin, Casar posted on X: 'I'm thankful to Austin's police, EMS, nurses, and doctors who saved lives.'
Date: 2026-03-04 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [statement] Greg Casar celebrated the Austin City Council's vote to reduce the police department budget by over $100 million in August 2020, tweeting 'We did it!! Austin City Council just reduced APD's budget by over $100 million and reinvested resources into our community's safety and well-being.'
Date: 2020-08-12 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review The top industry contributing to Casar's campaign in 2023‑2024 was Building Trade Unions ($71,000), followed by Lawyers/Law Firms ($69,175), Miscellaneous Unions ($61,989), and Retired ($59,427).
Date: 2024-12-31 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Greg Casar's campaign committee raised $1,116,006.32 in total receipts during the 2023‑2024 election cycle, of which $432,017.92 (38.85%) came from PAC contributions and $679,817.98 from individual contributions.
Date: 2024-12-31 Added: 01 May 2026
All Connections (0)
No connections documented.
Sources (9)
↗ Constituency baseline: Ballot measure congress_handoff Processed
↗ Constituency baseline: Top employer congress_handoff Processed
↗ Constituency baseline: Top employer congress_handoff Processed
↗ Roll call: H.Res.771 congress_handoff Processed
2026-04-23 UNVERIFIED SEARCH_ERROR: Greg Casar not found in fec claim_flag Processed