Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: unemployment rate: 4.9%
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Medicaid enrollment rate: ~30% of residents rely on Medicaid
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: bachelor's degree or higher: 35.5%
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: homeownership rate: 66.3%
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: poverty rate: 9.6%
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median household income: $73,829
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: New York Public Question 1 — Right to Reproductive Freedom Amendment (2023) (2023) — passed, margin 62%-38%
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 44-45 (share 0.12)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 61 (share 0.14)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 62 (share 0.18)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: St. Joseph's Health (Syracuse) (5500 employees)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: Syracuse University (5500 employees)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] Top employer: SUNY Upstate Medical University (10000 employees)
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[constituency_baseline] District summary: New York's 22nd Congressional District spans Central New York from Syracuse eastward through Utica to the Mohawk Valley, encompassing all of Onondaga and Madison counties and parts of Cayuga, Cortland, and Oneida counties. The district serves approximately 767,369 constituents with a median household income of $73,829 — well above the $37,585 national median. The population is 77.5% White (non-Hispanic), 9.1% Black, and 5.6% Hispanic, with a median age of 39.9. The poverty rate is 9.6%, homeownership is 66.3%, and 35.5% of adults hold a bachelor's degree or higher — above the national average. Approximately 30% of district residents rely on Medicaid as their primary health coverage. The economy is anchored in healthcare (SUNY Upstate Medical, St. Joseph's Health), higher education (Syracuse University, Le Moyne College, Hamilton College, SUNY ESF), advanced manufacturing, and agriculture (especially dairy). Major employers include SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse University, St. Joseph's Health, Micron's planned semiconductor megafab, and the Fulton Companies. The district has a Cook PVI of D+4 and shifted Democratic by roughly 10 points in the 2024 election. Mannion won the 2024 election with 54.5% of the vote, flipping the seat from Republican control.
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.R. 1689 (Haiti Temporary Protected Status Extension) on 2026-04-16: This vote is referenced in search results through Mannion's clerk.house.gov profile, though the exact roll call number was not independently verified. As a Democrat in a district with low immigrant population density, Haiti TPS was not a high-salience local issue.
Date: 2026-04-16
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.R. 9750 (Continuing Resolution — September 2025 Government Funding) on 2025-09-19: Mannion voted against the GOP continuing resolution that led to the DHS funding shutdown, breaking from his earlier bipartisan posture. He cited concerns about ICE funding levels and insisted on reforms before voting for DHS appropriations. The vote aligned with his post-Laken Riley evolution toward skepticism of expanded immigration enforcement funding.
Date: 2025-09-19
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.Con.Res. 14 (FY2025 Budget Resolution (GOP Reconciliation Framework)) on 2025-02-25: Mannion voted nay on the budget resolution requiring $880 billion in mandatory savings from the Energy and Commerce Committee (Medicaid) and $230 billion from the Agriculture Committee (SNAP). He stated the cuts were 'devastating' and would harm 'hundreds of thousands of constituents.' All Democrats opposed. The vote set up the OBBBA reconciliation fight and demonstrated Mannion's alignment with Democratic leadership on fiscal policy.
Date: 2025-02-25
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted yea on H.R. 29 (Laken Riley Act) on 2025-01-07: Mannion — in his first legislative vote as a congressman — was one of only 48 House Democrats to vote with all 216 Republicans for mandatory ICE detention of undocumented immigrants accused of nonviolent crimes. The vote signaled moderation on immigration in a D+4 swing district where border security was a campaign issue. A year later, he reversed his support for ICE expansion, calling the agency 'brutal' and demanding funding cuts. This was his most significant party defection.
Date: 2025-01-07
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Voted nay on H.R. 1 (One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA)) on 2025-07-03: Mannion voted nay on the GOP reconciliation bill that the CBO projected would add $3.4 trillion to deficits and cut approximately $1 trillion from Medicaid and SNAP. Over 30% of his district's residents rely on Medicaid as their primary health coverage. He called the bill 'devastating,' highlighting cuts to Grad PLUS loans, SNAP, and the $3.7 trillion additional debt. All Democrats plus 2 Republicans voted nay. The bill passed 218-214. The vote was party-aligned and constituent-aligned.
Date: 2025-07-03
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[vote] Mannion voted for the Laken Riley Act as his first legislative vote in Congress — a GOP-led bill criticized by civil liberties groups as expanding ICE detention powers and erasing due process — making him one of only 48 Democrats to support it.
Date: 2025-01-07
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[statement] Mannion called for 'reining in' ICE brutality, saying they are 'brutalizing American citizens and they are killing them.' He co-sponsored a resolution to impeach DHS Secretary Kristi Noem and called ICE 'the president's personal paramilitary unit.'
Date: 2026-02-04
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[statement] Six months into his term, Mannion emerged as a 'fiery fighter' — telling 2,000 constituents to help him fight Trump's 'reckless' agenda, declaring a constitutional crisis, grabbing a bullhorn at a 5,000-person 'No Kings' protest, and shouting profanities at GOP Rep. Mike Lawler on the House floor audibly on C-SPAN: 'F---ing get over there and get some f---ing balls.'
Date: 2025-06-14
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
[platform] Mannion campaigned as a moderate Democrat who would work across the aisle, saying he would be 'a uniter, not a partisan fighter.' He pledged to avoid bitter polarization and work with Republicans.
Date: 2024-11-06
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
JStreetPAC listed Mannion as a supported candidate for his commitment to a two-state solution, continued aid to Israel, sending aid to Palestinians, and working toward a diplomatic peace process. AIPAC did not rank among his top contributors.
Date: 2025-02-25
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Mannion taught AP Biology and Chemistry for 28 years at West Genesee High School. He served as president of the West Genesee Teachers' Association, negotiating labor contracts and representing educators. He was a longtime union leader before entering politics.
Date: 1992-2020
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
Mannion had $837,547 cash on hand after the Q3 2024 filing, trailing opponent Brandon Williams' $1.36M. Outside groups spent over $10M in the NY-22 race, mostly on negative ads. Quiver Quantitative estimated his net worth at approximately $456,000 as of February 2026 — the 399th highest in Congress.
Date: 2024-09-30
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
PAC contributions from MoveOn.org ($5,000), 314 Action Fund ($10,000), AFL-CIO ($3,000), and Onward Together ($2,000) supported Mannion's campaign. JStreetPAC endorsed Mannion, supporting his pro-Israel but pro-two-state-solution stance.
Date: 2024-12-31
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
$238,000 was raised from political organizations and labor unions in Q3 2024 alone, according to FEC records. The New York State AFL-CIO, which represents 2.5 million union members, endorsed Mannion. Major labor endorsements include AFT, AFSCME, NEA, NYSUT, CSEA, PEF, UAW Region 9, and the Greater Syracuse Labor Council.
Date: 2024-09-30
Added: 02 May 2026
Pending Review
2023-2024 cycle: Raised approximately $2.0-2.1M in Q3 2024 alone — a quarterly record for a Central NY congressional race dating back at least 44 years. About 73% of individual contributions came from within New York, with 42% from within the district. Nine of his top 10 donor ZIP codes were in the Syracuse area.
Date: 2024-09-30
Added: 02 May 2026