Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Foreign-Born Population: 5.58% (39,600 residents)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Bachelor's Degree or Higher: 32.8% (national: 33.7%)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Cook Partisan Voting Index: D+8 (2024)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Racial/Ethnic Composition: 81.6% White (non-Hispanic), 9.4% Hispanic, remainder Asian/Black/Two or More Races
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Homeownership Rate: 63.5% (national: 65.5%)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Poverty Rate: 15.9% (national: 12.4%)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Population (2024 ACS): 710,014
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Median Household Income: $68,838 (national: $37,585)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Oregon Measure 118 — Corporate Tax Revenue Rebate (2024) — failed, margin 21% Yes to 79% No (statewide)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Oregon Measure 115 — Impeachment of Statewide Elected Officials (2024) — passed, margin 62.3% Yes to 37.7% No (statewide)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 11 - Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing and Hunting (share 0.05)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 31-33 - Manufacturing (incl. wood products) (share 0.1)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 44-45 - Retail Trade (share 0.12)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 62 - Health Care and Social Assistance (share 0.16)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 61 - Educational Services (share 0.18)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Roseburg Forest Products (2500 employees)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: PeaceHealth (Sacred Heart Medical Center) (3500 employees)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
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[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Oregon State University (Corvallis) (4500 employees)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: University of Oregon (Eugene) (5000 employees)
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] District summary: Oregon's 4th Congressional District encompasses the southern half of Oregon's coastal counties — Coos, Curry, Lincoln, Lane, and Benton — plus parts of Douglas and Linn counties. Centered around Eugene (home to the University of Oregon) and Corvallis (Oregon State University), the district is 81.6% White (non-Hispanic) with a 9.4% Hispanic population. The median age is 42.3, with 16% of residents aged 70+. Median household income is $68,838, well above the national median, but the poverty rate is 15.9% and 8.9% of residents lack health insurance. Homeownership is 63.5% and median home value is $412,900. The Cook PVI is D+8, reflecting Democratic lean but relative competitiveness — Trump won the district in 2024 while Hoyle simultaneously won reelection. The district is 85% forestland, with 2.3 million acres under federal management, making timber, wildfire policy, and federal land management existential local issues alongside healthcare, higher education, and coastal fishing.
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.R. 8281 (Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act of 2024) on 2024-07-10: Hoyle voted Nay on requiring documentary proof of citizenship for voter registration, joining all but 5 Democrats. In April 2025 she introduced the Vote at Home Act to expand mail voting access, directly countering the SAVE Act's approach. Her Republican challenger attacked her Nay vote as enabling non-citizen voting, making the vote a campaign issue. Oregon's vote-by-mail system is long-established, and Hoyle's advocacy for voting access is consistent with her state's norms but provided a sharp contrast with GOP border and election-integrity messaging in her competitive district.
Date: 2024-07-10
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.R. 1 (May 2025) / H.R. 1 (July 2025) (FY2025 Budget Reconciliation ('One Big Beautiful Bill Act')) on 2025-07-03: Hoyle voted Nay on both the May 2025 and July 2025 versions of the reconciliation bill, calling it 'ruthless' and 'the single largest wealth transfer in American history.' Her district stands to lose coverage for 30,200 under the ACA, with 246,589 Medicaid recipients at risk and 163,000 SNAP beneficiaries facing cuts. While the entire Democratic caucus opposed the bill, Hoyle's sustained vocal opposition — filing four amendments, participating in 29-hour hearings, and calling the bill 'looting' — demonstrated strong constituent alignment on healthcare access for a district where 15.9% live in poverty.
Date: 2025-07-03
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on H.R. 35 (Agent Raul Gonzalez Officer Safety Act (119th Congress)) on 2025-02-13: Hoyle was one of only 50 House Democrats to join all 214 Republicans in passing a border-enforcement bill that creates mandatory minimum sentences for fleeing Border Patrol within 100 miles of the border. The bill also renders non-citizens convicted deportable. Hoyle's district has no international border but is home to 39,600 foreign-born residents and growing immigrant communities. Her vote broke sharply from the Democratic caucus and aligned with border-security messaging that positions her for a Trump-won district.
Date: 2025-02-13
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on H.R. 7511 / H.R. 29 (Laken Riley Act (118th → 119th Congress)) on 2025-01-07: Hoyle voted Nay on the Laken Riley Act (H.R. 7511) in March 2024 when only 37 Democrats supported it. She voted Yea on the same bill reintroduced as H.R. 29 in January 2025, joining 48 Democrats and all Republicans. Her reversal came after her district shifted from D+9 to D+8 and Trump won it in 2024, creating electoral cross-pressure. Hoyle cited constituent feedback in explaining her flip. The district's 5.58% foreign-born population and immigrant communities provide a counter-pressure to the enforcement vote.
Date: 2025-01-07
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on H.R. 8790 / H.R. 471 (Fix Our Forests Act (118th → 119th Congress)) on 2025-01-23: After voting Nay on the Fix Our Forests Act in September 2024 (Roll Call 448, 268-151 passage), Hoyle reversed to Yea in January 2025 (Roll Call 25, 279-141). She was one of only 64 Democrats to support the bill while 141 opposed. The earlier Nay vote incensed her Republican opponent and timber-dependent constituents in Oregon's 4th District, where 85% of land is forested and 2.3 million acres are federally managed. Hoyle cited compromise and wildfire urgency for her reversal. Prior vote: https://clerk.house.gov/Votes/2024448 (Sept 24, 2024, Nay).
Date: 2025-01-23
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[statement] Hoyle voted Nay on H.R. 29, the Laken Riley Act, on January 7, 2025, then—per her office's press release—explained her Yes vote by saying: 'The first time this bill came up, I voted no because law enforcement in my community was concerned... However, I've heard from constituents... For these reasons, I voted for the Laken Riley Act.'
Date: 2025-01-07
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[vote] Hoyle voted Yea on H.R. 471, the Fix Our Forests Act, on January 23, 2025, calling it 'a compromise that's necessary as wildfires continue to burn out of control' and acknowledging some environmental groups oppose it.
Date: 2025-01-23
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[vote] Hoyle voted Nay on H.R. 8790, the Fix Our Forests Act, on September 24, 2024. Her 2024 GOP opponent Monique DeSpain called the vote a 'betrayal' of Oregon's wildfire-stricken communities.
Date: 2024-09-24
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[disclosure] Hoyle was weeks or months late disclosing 217 stock trades by her husband valued between $245,215 and $3,355,000, violating the STOCK Act twice — the very law she champions strengthening. She blamed her husband's financial adviser for the trades.
Date: 2025-09-16
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
[statement] Hoyle is a cosponsor of House legislation to ban lawmakers and their families from buying and selling individual stocks. She told OpenSecrets: 'the American people deserve transparency when it comes to the finances of Members of Congress.'
Date: 2025-09-30
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
Hoyle's campaign reported full-disclosure of $294,453 (93.6%) in contributions for the 2023-2024 cycle, with $13,900 incomplete and $6,153 no disclosure.
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
A Justice Department subpoena in January 2024 signaled a federal criminal investigation looking at Hoyle's role in awarding a $554,000 taxpayer-funded grant to ENDVR, a nonprofit co-founded by La Mota CEO Rosa Cazares, during Hoyle's tenure as Oregon Labor Commissioner.
Date: 2024-01-31
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
After the STOCK Act violation, Hoyle confirmed her husband's retirement account was being transferred into a mutual fund to avoid future conflicts of interest. She stated, 'the American people deserve transparency when it comes to the finances of Members of Congress.'
Date: 2025-09-30
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
Hoyle was weeks or months late disclosing 217 individual stock trades by her husband, Stephen, with a combined value between $245,215 and $3,355,000, violating the STOCK Act. Several trades involved companies under the jurisdiction of her House committees (Boeing, Booking Holdings, Canadian Natural Resources, Deere & Co., Eaton Corp., Knight-Swift Transportation).
Date: 2025-09-16
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
La Mota cannabis company co-founders Rosa Cazares and Aaron Mitchell donated a combined $5,800 to Hoyle's congressional campaign in April 2022, plus an additional $1,000 from Laura Vega (co-founder of the nonprofit ENDVR). Mitchell also contributed $20,000 in cash to Hoyle's political action committee on June 11, 2021.
Date: 2022-04-30
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
In the 2023-2024 cycle, Hoyle received $9,750 from 4 PACs, top among them Transportation Trades Department AFL-CIO ($6,000) and Associated Oregon Loggers ($250).
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 28 Apr 2026
Pending Review
Career raised: $2,631,482 in the 2024 cycle (Incumbent Reelected) and $2,594,292 in the 2022 cycle (Open Seat).
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 28 Apr 2026