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[ENTITY FILE] SUBJECT-10972 PERSON ACTIVE
RY
// Subject

Rudy Yakym‌‍‌‌‍‍‍‍‌‍‌‌‌‍‌​‍​‍‍

US Representative (R-IN-2)
Tracked Sitting member of the House; tracked for votes, donor mapping, and committee oversight.
Facts on record48
Connections mapped0
Sources cited16
Stated vs Revealed
No documented contradictions on file.
TIMELINE Role Overlap Visualizer →
Facts (48)
Data Freshness
Fresh Last update: 4d ago · Avg age: 4d
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 (48) — unsourced metadata
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anc‌‍‌‌‍‍‍‍‌‍‌‌‌‍‌​‍​‍‍hor: Average commute time: 21.8 minutes
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic‌‍‌‌‍‍‍‍‌‍‌‌‌‍‌​‍​‍‍ anchor: Drives alone to work: 76.2%
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demograph‌‍‌‌‍‍‍‍‌‍‌‌‌‍‌​‍​‍‍ic anchor: Unemployment rate: 4.2%
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Median age: 37.9
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: U.S. citizenship rate: 96.1%
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Hispanic population share: 12%
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: White (Non-Hispanic) population share: 78.3%
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Population: 752,547 (2024)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Median rent: $1,009
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Median property value: $191,200
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Bachelor's degree or higher: 25.0%
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Homeownership rate: 73.4%
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Poverty rate: 8.8% (ACS 5-Year)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Demographic anchor: Median household income: $68,107 (2024)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: St. Joseph County — Battery plant incentives (GM/Samsung SDI joint venture, 2023) (2023) — approved, margin expected to bring 1,600 jobs
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Ballot measure: Indiana Senate Enrolled Act 1 — Abortion ban with limited exceptions (August 2022) (2022) — passed, margin enacted by legislature
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 44-45 - Retail Trade (share 0.11)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 31-33 - Manufacturing (share 0.18)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 62 - Health Care and Social Assistance (share 0.15)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Dominant industry: NAICS 3362 - Motor Vehicle Body and Trailer Manufacturing (RV industry) (share 0.12)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: Lippert Components (Elkhart — RV and manufactured housing components supplier) (4000 employees)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: Thor Industries (Elkhart — world's largest RV manufacturer) (2500 employees)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: Jayco Inc (Middlebury — RV manufacturer, top Yakym donor at $46,200) (3000 employees)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: Beacon Health System (South Bend — Memorial Hospital and affiliated facilities) (4000 employees)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] Top employer: University of Notre Dame (South Bend) (5000 employees)
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [constituency_baseline] District summary: Indiana's 2nd Congressional District encompasses north-central Indiana, including South Bend, Elkhart, Mishawaka, Warsaw, and stretching into rural Kosciusko, Fulton, and Marshall counties. With approximately 752,547 constituents, it is a solid Republican seat (Cook PVI R+29, D shift +4). Yakym has represented this district since winning a 2022 special election to succeed the late Rep. Jackie Walorski. The district has a median household income of $68,107 — well above the national median — and a poverty rate of 8.8%. The population is 78.3% White (Non-Hispanic) and 12% Hispanic, with 96.1% U.S. citizenship. Only 25% hold bachelor's degrees, well below the 33.7% national average. Median home values are $191,200 with 73.4% homeownership. The economy is anchored by manufacturing — Elkhart is the 'RV Capital of the World,' home to Jayco, Thor Industries, and numerous RV suppliers — as well as healthcare, Notre Dame University, and agriculture. It is car-dependent: 76.2% drive alone with a 21.8-minute average commute. The district was previously represented by Jackie Walorski (R, 2013-2022) and Joe Donnelly (D, 2007-2013), making it historically competitive before trending strongly Republican. Key local concerns include manufacturing job retention, RV industry regulation and tax policy, healthcare access, and trade policy. Yakym serves on the House Ways and Means Committee and House Budget Committee.
Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Voted yea on H.J.Res. 28 / H.J.Res. 139 (Balanced Budget Amendment — On Passage (March 2026)) on 2026-03-18: Yakym voted Yea on the Balanced Budget Amendment — the same legislation concept he introduced as his first bill in Congress. This vote occurred in the same 2025-2026 session as his Yea vote for the OBBB, which the CBO projected would add $3-4 trillion to the deficit. Voting for a constitutional balanced budget requirement while simultaneously supporting deficit-financed tax cuts is a direct contradiction. Yakym has not publicly reconciled these two positions. The juxtaposition illustrates the gap between symbolic fiscal conservatism and operative legislating.
Date: 2026-03-18 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Voted yea on H.R. 7147 / H.R. 7744 (Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act, 2026) on 2026-04-29: Yakym voted to fund DHS and end the 76-day partial shutdown. The vote was party-aligned and consistent with his border-security messaging. His district's 96.1% citizenship rate means ICE enforcement has limited local impact, but the vote aligned with his Laken Riley Act co-sponsorship and AIPAC donor support.
Date: 2026-04-29 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Voted yea on H.R. 5371 (Continuing Appropriations and Extensions Act, 2026 — Ending the 43-Day Government Shutdown) on 2025-11-12: Yakym voted to end the longest government shutdown in U.S. history — a pragmatic governing vote that contrasted sharply with his September 2023 Nay vote on a CR that would have avoided a shutdown. His 8.8% poverty-rate district and SNAP-dependent population were directly harmed by the prolonged shutdown. The vote aligned with his Ways and Means Committee institutional role advocating for economic stability.
Date: 2025-11-12 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Voted yea on H.R. 7567 (Farm, Food, and National Security Act of 2026 (Farm Bill) — On Passage) on 2026-04-30: Yakym voted Yea (224-200) on the Farm Bill that preserved $187 billion in SNAP cuts from the OBBB. His district includes agricultural areas and he serves on the House Budget Committee. The bill locked in SNAP reductions affecting food-insecure families in his 8.8% poverty-rate district. Only 3 Republicans voted Nay; 14 Democrats crossed to support. Yakym did not issue a prominent public statement on this vote, making it a conference-loyalty vote without specific district rationale.
Date: 2026-04-30 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Voted yea on H.R. 22 (Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act — On Passage) on 2025-04-10: Yakym voted with all Republicans (220-208) to require documentary proof of citizenship for voter registration. Only 4 Democrats joined. His district is 96.1% citizens — the ID requirements create minimal barriers for constituents. The AFL-CIO scored this vote against working people, noting it 'would create duplicative and burdensome barriers for Americans to access their constitutional right to vote.' The League of Women Voters characterized the bill as a voter suppression measure.
Date: 2025-04-10 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Voted yea on H.R. 8035 (Ukraine Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024 ($60.8 billion)) on 2024-04-20: Yakym was a strong pro-Ukraine Republican, earning an 'A' grade from Republicans for Ukraine. He voted to protect $300M in Ukraine assistance from being stricken from the NDAA, voted to preserve lend-lease authority, and voted for the 2023 and 2024 Ukraine supplemental appropriations. He stated: 'We cannot allow nations to bulldoze other nations.' His support placed him in the minority of House Republicans and distinguished him from MAGA isolationists — a notable contrast to his otherwise Trump-loyal voting record. His district has no major defense contractors, making this vote a reflection of foreign policy conviction rather than constituent economic interest.
Date: 2024-04-20 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Voted yea on S. 5 / H.R. 29 (Laken Riley Act — On Passage) on 2025-01-07: Yakym was a co-sponsor and enthusiastic supporter, stating: 'The open border policies of the past four years under Joe Biden and Kamala Harris have been an unmitigated disaster, and they've turned every American community into a border community.' He was among the 46 Democrats and all Republicans (264-159) to mandate ICE detention for undocumented immigrants charged with theft. His district is 96.1% citizens with low foreign-born population — immigration enforcement has limited direct impact on his constituents. The vote aligned with his AIPAC donor support ($89,100 PAC), his 'Hamas Apologists' op-ed positioning, and his Trump-endorsed conservative identity.
Date: 2025-01-07 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Voted yea on H.R. 1 (One Big Beautiful Bill Act — On Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment and Final Passage) on 2025-07-03: Yakym's Yea vote (218-214) is the defining vote of his congressional career. He was a chief promoter of the bill, calling it 'the most pro-growth, pro-worker, pro-business, pro-family, and pro-America legislation of our generation.' He secured the inclusion of his Travel Trailer and Camper Tax Parity Act — a provision restoring full interest deductibility for RV dealers, benefiting the Elkhart-area RV industry and his top donor Jayco Inc ($46,200). The CBO projected the bill would add $3-4 trillion to the deficit and cut approximately $930 billion from Medicaid. His district's 8.8% poverty rate, $68,107 median household income, and heavy reliance on manufacturing employment made the Medicaid and SNAP cuts particularly impactful. This vote directly contradicted Yakym's signature legislative priority — the Balanced Budget Amendment he introduced as his first bill, which would constitutionally require balanced federal budgets. The AFL-CIO and CWA both scored his vote 0% — against working people on all key 2025 votes. Constituents protested outside his Mishawaka office the day before the vote, calling the bill harmful to Hoosiers.
Date: 2025-07-03 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [statement] Yakym's office stated: 'Listening to Hoosiers—their thoughts, concerns, and ideas—is the most essential part of my job. That's why I prioritize traveling to all 11 counties each month, meeting with people where they live and work, engaging in meaningful and productive conversations.' His office maintains he is accessible through controlled events.
Date: 2025-03-21 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [platform] Yakym introduced and advocated for the Travel Trailer and Camper Tax Parity Act — a bill to restore full interest deductibility for RV dealers. The provision was included in the OBBB, benefiting the RV industry centered in his Elkhart-area district. Jayco Inc, a major RV manufacturer, is his top campaign contributor ($46,200).
Date: 2025-07-03 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [vote] On November 12, 2025, Yakym voted Yea on the continuing resolution (H.R. 5371) to end the longest government shutdown in U.S. history — a pragmatic governing vote that kept the government open and restored SNAP benefits and federal employee paychecks.
Date: 2025-11-12 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [vote] On September 30, 2023, Yakym voted Nay on a continuing resolution (H.R. 5860) to keep the government funded and avoid a shutdown. A constituent letter in the South Bend Tribune documented: 'Rep. Yakym defied House Republican leadership and allied himself with extremist Matt Gaetz. He voted to inflict pain on his constituents.' 335 Representatives voted to keep the government open; 91 voted Nay.
Date: 2023-09-30 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [disclosure] A South Bend Tribune letter to the editor noted: 'The bill is projected to add more than $2.3 trillion to the national debt. Rudy Yakym voted for it. What happened to the fiscally conservative Republican Party? This big ugly bill is financially and morally bankrupt. And Rudy voted for it.'
Date: 2025-06-03 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [vote] Yakym voted Yea on the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (H.R. 1, Roll Call 190) on July 3, 2025, calling it 'the most pro-growth, pro-worker, pro-business, pro-family, and pro-America legislation of our generation' and praising it for 'achieving the largest reduction in federal spending in history.' The CBO projected the OBBB would add approximately $3-4 trillion to the federal deficit over 10 years.
Date: 2025-07-03 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review [statement] Yakym introduced a Balanced Budget Amendment (H.J.Res. 28) as his first legislation in Congress on January 26, 2023, stating on the House floor: 'This is the first bill I am introducing as a Member of Congress. And it's because I believe getting our fiscal house in order is the issue of our time...We didn't get into this mess because anyone thinks the path we're on is sustainable. We got here because Congress has lacked the political will to do anything about it.' He emphasized that in Indiana, 'we make responsible spending choices and exercise fiscal discipline every single day.'
Date: 2023-01-26 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Yakym introduced the Travel Trailer and Camper Tax Parity Act (H.R. 332) to fix an error in the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act that was costing RV dealers — a major industry in his Elkhart-area district — millions annually in lost floor plan interest deductions. The provision was included in the OBBB.
Date: 2025-01-14 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Q4 2025 fundraising: disclosed $548,300 in FEC filing (January 31, 2026), 73.8% from individual donors; $1.5M cash on hand. In addition to his campaign committee, Yakym operates a leadership PAC: Republicans United to Defend You PAC.
Date: 2026-01-31 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Yakym's career before Congress: Director of Growth Initiatives at Kem Krest, a supply chain management firm in Elkhart, IN — the RV manufacturing capital of the world. He holds a B.S. in finance from IU South Bend and an Executive MBA from Notre Dame. He also previously served as Finance Director for Walorski for Congress.
Date: 2022-11-14 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Quiver Quantitative estimates Yakym's net worth at $13.9 million as of February 2026 — the 92nd highest in Congress. Approximately $332,000 invested in publicly traded assets tracked live. $2.2 million in total trade volume from STOCK Act filings.
Date: 2026-02-02 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Top contributing organizations (2023-2024): Jayco Inc ($46,200 all individuals), Ambassador Enterprises ($26,400), Daryle Doden Personal Finances ($19,800), KPS Capital Partners ($19,800). American Israel Public Affairs Cmte contributed $89,100 via PAC (Congress Machine aggregate).
Date: 2024-06-30 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review Top contributing industries (2023-2024): Retired ($432,839), Republican/Conservative ($118,168), Misc Transport ($79,360), Real Estate ($58,374), Pro-Israel ($56,381).
Date: 2024-06-30 Added: 03 May 2026
Pending Review 2023-2024 election cycle: Raised $1,995,627; Spent $1,451,576; Cash on hand $692,163; Debts $0. Source of funds: Large individual contributions 26.53%, Small individual contributions 24.68%, Other 24.55%, PAC contributions 24.23%.
Date: 2024-06-30 Added: 03 May 2026
All Connections (0)
No connections documented.
Sources (16)
↗ Constituency baseline: Demographic anchor congress_handoff Processed
↗ Constituency baseline: Ballot measure congress_handoff Processed
↗ Constituency baseline: Top employer congress_handoff Processed
↗ Roll call: H.R. 7567 congress_handoff Processed
↗ Roll call: S. 5 / H.R. 29 congress_handoff Processed
2026-04-23 UNVERIFIED SEARCH_ERROR: Rudy Yakym not found in fec claim_flag Processed