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[ENTITY FILE] SUBJECT-11192 PERSON ACTIVE
ER
// Subject

Emily Randall​‍​‌‌‌‍‌‍​​‌‌‌‌​​​​‌​‌‌‌‌‌‌

US Representative (D-WA-6)
Tracked Sitting member of the House; tracked for votes, donor mapping, and committee oversight.
Facts on record39
Connections mapped0
Sources cited21
Stated vs Revealed
No documented contradictions on file.
TIMELINE Role Overlap Visualizer →
Facts (39)
Data Freshness
Fresh Last update: 7d ago · Avg age: 7d
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 (38) — unsourced metadata
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic a​‍​‌‌‌‍‌‍​​‌‌‌‌​​​​‌​‌‌‌‌‌‌nchor: Cook Partisan Voter Index: D+14
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anc​‍​‌‌‌‍‌‍​​‌‌‌‌​​​​‌​‌‌‌‌‌‌hor: bachelor's degree attainment: 35.2%
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic​‍​‌‌‌‍‌‍​​‌‌‌‌​​​​‌​‌‌‌‌‌‌ anchor: median home value: $498,600
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median rent: $1,651
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: homeownership rate: 69.2%
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: unemployment rate: 5.1%
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: poverty rate: 6.3%
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: median household income: $90,625
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Washington Initiative 2124 (Opt Out of WA Cares Long-Term Care Program) (2024) — failed, margin 45% for, 55% against (statewide)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Washington Initiative 2109 (Repeal Capital Gains Tax) (2024) — failed, margin 37% for, 63% against (statewide)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Washington Initiative 2117 (Repeal Carbon Cap-and-Invest Program) (2024) — failed, margin 38% for, 62% against (statewide)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Washington Initiative 2066 (Ban on Natural Gas Bans) (2024) — passed, margin 51.2% for, 48.8% against (statewide)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS Retail Trade (44-45) (share 0.1)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS Timber / Forestry and Logging (113) (share 0.08)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS Tourism / Accommodation and Food Services (72) (share 0.12)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS Healthcare and Social Assistance (62) (share 0.16)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS Defense / Federal Government (928110) (share 0.18)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: Washington State Government (public administration) (5000 employees)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: Joint Base Lewis-McChord (military/defense) (40000 employees)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: MultiCare Health System / Tacoma General Hospital (healthcare) (8000 employees)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: Puget Sound Naval Shipyard & Intermediate Maintenance Facility (defense/federal) (15000 employees)
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] District summary: Washington's 6th Congressional District encompasses the Olympic Peninsula, the Kitsap Peninsula, and most of the city of Tacoma, serving approximately 782,007 constituents. It is rated D+14 by the Cook Partisan Voting Index — a solidly Democratic seat. The district is 74.7% White with a median household income of $90,625 (well above the $37,585 national median), though this masks significant rural poverty on the Olympic Peninsula. The unemployment rate is 5.1% and the poverty rate is 6.3%. Homeownership is 69.2% with a median home value of $498,600 and median rent of $1,651. The median age is 42.4, older than the national average, and 35.2% hold a bachelor's degree or higher. The district is a working-class region historically dependent on the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton (Kitsap County's largest employer at 15,000+ workers), a declining timber industry on the Pacific and Juan de Fuca coasts, and tourism centered on Olympic National Park. Tacoma anchors the district's eastern edge with a diversifying economy. Randall is the first woman, first person of color, and first openly LGBTQ+ person to represent the district, which had been held exclusively by white men for its 91-year history. Her predecessor Derek Kilmer (D) held the seat from 2013 to 2025.
Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Voted nay on H.R. 1 (One Big Beautiful Bill Act (Trump's 2025 budget reconciliation bill)) on 2025-07-03: Randall voted with every House Democrat against the bill that included $715 billion in Medicaid cuts. Her district has significant rural hospital reliance on Medicaid, and she walked out of Trump's joint address to Congress in protest over the issue. The vote aligned with constituent healthcare interests: Washington's 6th District has an older median age (42.4) and rural communities dependent on federal health programs.
Date: 2025-07-03 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Voted nay on H.R. 28 (Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act of 2025) on 2025-01-14: Randall — the first openly LGBTQ+ person in Washington's congressional delegation — gave her first House floor speech opposing this bill to ban transgender athletes from women's sports. She posted an 'All Gender Bathroom' sign outside her office in protest. Only 2 Democrats voted for the bill. The vote aligned with her LGBTQ+ constituency and identity, while her vocal opposition cemented her as a progressive culture-warrior.
Date: 2025-01-14 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Voted nay on H.R. 29 (Laken Riley Act) on 2025-01-22: Randall voted against mandatory ICE detention of undocumented immigrants charged with theft-related crimes. Her district is home to the Northwest ICE Detention Center in Tacoma — one of the largest in the country — and she has made immigration oversight a signature issue. Only 48 Democrats supported the bill; Randall's nay vote aligned with immigrant communities in her district and her progressive platform.
Date: 2025-01-22 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Voted nay on H.R. 3633 (Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act of 2025) on 2025-07-17: Randall voted against the flagship crypto regulatory bill despite having received $1.5 million in independent expenditures from the crypto Super PAC Protect Progress and being rated a 'strong' crypto supporter by Coinbase. The vote defected from the donor interest that helped secure her primary victory while aligning with progressive Democrats (134 Dems voted nay). The tension between her campaign rhetoric on blockchain innovation and her legislative vote exemplifies a donor_defection — she broke with the industry that bet heavily on her.
Date: 2025-07-17 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [disclosure] Randall has portrayed herself as a progressive champion, joining the Congressional Progressive Caucus in March 2025 and co-sponsoring articles of impeachment against DHS Secretary Kristi Noem. However, her strong pro-Israel declaration in June 2024 was her first substantive public stance on Gaza — a position progressives called 'pink-washing genocide.' The Stranger reported she 'lost the left' and that Palestinian organizers who had previously supported her withdrew endorsements.
Date: 2024-06-28 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [statement] In June 2024, after learning her campaign manager had liked pro-Palestinian social media posts, Randall told Jewish Insider she would 'support Israel's obligation of self-defense and our country's support for that right,' calling Hamas a terrorist organization that uses 'human shields.' She fired the staffer immediately.
Date: 2024-06-24 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [vote] On July 17, 2025, Randall voted Nay on H.R. 3633, the Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act — the major bipartisan crypto regulatory bill that Stand With Crypto called 'very pro-crypto.' The bill passed 294-134 with 78 Democrats supporting. Randall voted with the progressive wing against the bill.
Date: 2025-07-17 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review [statement] In July 2024, Randall completed the Stand With Crypto Questionnaire and was rated a 'strong' crypto supporter. Her campaign website stated: 'I believe in the importance of driving technological innovation and economic growth, including through blockchain technology and the digital asset industry.' The crypto Super PAC Protect Progress spent $1.5 million supporting her primary campaign.
Date: 2024-07-22 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Randall previously served in the Washington State Senate (2019-2024), where she was Deputy Majority Leader and Chair of the Senate Higher Education & Workforce Development Committee. She won her 2018 state senate race by just 101 votes (0.14% margin). Her legislative focus included expanding healthcare access, the Keep Our Care Act regulating hospital mergers, and the Washington College Grant increasing financial aid.
Date: 2024-12-08 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review As of November 2025, Randall's estimated net worth was approximately $108,300 — ranking 461st highest in Congress. She has no record of corporate PAC contributions to her congressional campaign and has emphasized grassroots fundraising throughout her political career.
Date: 2025-11-13 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review In January 2025, shortly after taking office, Randall sold 11 stocks held via a trust (Garret D. Leahey 2019 Irrevocable Trust, benefiting Alison Leahey) including Abbott Laboratories, Alphabet, Wells Fargo, Medtronic, Mondelez, Fortive, Procter & Gamble, Verizon, ExxonMobil, Amgen, and PepsiCo — each valued between $1,001 and $15,000. The transactions were timely disclosed under the STOCK Act on February 11, 2025.
Date: 2025-01-07 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Randall is the first openly LGBTQ+ member of Washington's congressional delegation and the first queer Latina in the U.S. House. Equality PAC and the LGBTQ Victory Fund were significant backers of her 2024 campaign.
Date: 2025-01-03 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Cryptocurrency investors Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss donated directly to Randall's campaign in 2024, despite their support for President Trump. Randall's Democratic primary opponent Hilary Franz called the Protect Progress spending 'the darkest money support, which is more outside spending than this district has ever seen.'
Date: 2024-07-25 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review In July 2024, the crypto Super PAC Protect Progress spent approximately $1.5 million on independent expenditures supporting Randall in the Democratic primary — the most outside spending Washington's 6th District had ever seen. Randall was rated a 'strong' crypto supporter by Coinbase's Stand With Crypto initiative, and her campaign website stated she believed 'in the importance of driving technological innovation and economic growth, including through blockchain technology and the digital asset industry.'
Date: 2024-07-26 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review Top 2023-2024 contributors: Southern States LLC ($19,800), Microsoft Corp employees ($19,740), Equality PAC ($17,300), Service Employees International Union ($15,050), Blue Wave Political Partners ($13,512). Top industries: Retired ($307,236), Leadership PACs ($112,800), Human Rights ($93,755), Lawyers/Law Firms ($77,776), Non-Profit Institutions ($69,443).
Date: 2024-12-31 Added: 01 May 2026
Pending Review For the 2023-2024 election cycle, Rep. Emily Randall's campaign committee raised $1,968,249 and spent $1,940,378. Large individual contributions accounted for 57.65% ($1,136,456), PAC contributions 21.40% ($421,950), and small individual contributions (<$200) 20.89% ($411,771). Randall accepted no corporate PAC money and relied heavily on grassroots and labor donors.
Date: 2024-12-31 Added: 01 May 2026
All Connections (0)
No connections documented.
Sources (21)
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2026-04-23 UNVERIFIED SEARCH_ERROR: Emily Randall not found in fec claim_flag Processed