PublicReceiptBeta
Electoral receipt · State Assembly

JOSH HOOVER

State Assembly · ASM-7 · 2026 cycle

Funding Receipt
JOSH HOOVER · 2026 cycle
★ · campaign finance, itemized · ★
Raised for this race $1,082,345
Funding mix · 299 unique donors · primary committee
S Small donors (Under $500) $17,613 · 2%
M Medium donors ($500–$999) $32,327 · 3%
L Large donors ($1,000+) $1,032,405 · 95%
Where the money comes from
66% from named interests
What this means →
Sort by
InterestAmountShareGiftsDonors
Candidate / party transfers$266K25%1711
Other organizations (unclassified)unattributable$196K18%9570
Individuals (no industry data disclosed)unattributable$164K15%214112
Public safety (police/fire)$61K6%2610
Energy & utilities$59K6%1710
Healthcare / pharma / medical$53K5%2517
Building trades / construction labor$42K4%106
Construction & contractors$36K3%135
Tribal governments / gaming$35K3%108
Real estate & development$34K3%1611
Finance & banking$20K2%147
Agriculture$17K2%118
Business & trade groups$16K1%33
Entertainment & media$15K1%85
Legal / trial lawyers$15K1%138
Engineers & scientists (public)$12K1%21
Other labor unions$12K1%52
Teachers & education$12K1%21
Other named interests
1 category below 1%: Gaming / sports betting
$5K0%32

Headline excludes self-funding and the unattributable individuals bucket — gifts from people for whom employer/occupation either isn't disclosed (Cal-Access leaves it blank on roughly 85% of individual contributions) or doesn't fit any sector category. Named interests below 1% of total raised collapse into a single "Other named interests" row to keep the long tail legible; the rolled-up category names are listed inline beneath that row. See the methodology for the classifier rules and the two distinct reasons a gift becomes unattributable.

Top donors to primary committee (25 shown)
01 California Republican Party $161,000
02 Hoover for Assembly 2024 $45,620
03 Peace Officers Research Assoc of California PAC SCC (PORAC PAC) $15,900
04 Sempra Energy $15,800
05 Comcast Financial Agency Corporation $14,900
06 Sacramento County Deputy Sheriffs Assoc PAC $14,800
07 California Real Estate PAC (CREPAC) SCC $12,800
08 Professional Engineers in California Government SCC (PECG PAC SCC) $12,000
09 Amazon.com Services, LLC(Andrea Fava) $11,800
10 California State Council of Laborers PAC SCC $11,800
11 Association of California School Administrators PAC SCC $11,800
12 Pechanga Band of Indians $11,800
13 Chevron U.S.A., Inc. $11,800
14 Sanchez for Assembly 2026 $11,800
15 Joe Patterson for Assembly 2026 $11,800
16 Northern California Carpenters Regional Council POWER PAC SCC $11,800
17 California Credit Union League PAC $11,400
18 ChamberPAC Small Contributor Committee, Sponsored by CA Chamber of Commerce $11,095
19 General Motors Company PAC (GM PAC) · C00076810 $11,000
20 Associated General Contractors PAC $10,900
21 Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association Small Contributor Committee $10,000
22 American Council of Engineering Companies (ACEC) California PAC $8,900
23 California Association of Highway Patrolmen PAC SCC $8,000
24 California Professional Firefighters PAC SCC $8,000
25 Granite Construction Company $8,000
Primary committee total $1,082,345
Wider fundraising footprint · primary is 100% of total controlled
HOOVER FOR ASSEMBLY 2026 · Primary campaign committee $1,082,345
HOOVER'S BALLOT MEASURE COMMITTEE TO RESTORE CALIFORNIA; ASSEMBLYMAN JOSH · Ballot-measure / leadership PAC $3,500
All controlled committees $1,085,845
Where the non-primary money goes
$$ Ballot-measure / leadership PAC $3,500
Source: California Secretary of State Cal-Access bulk export
Pipeline: scripts/pull_calaccess_filings.py · Dedup: latest AMEND_ID
/methodology

What you're seeing. The Raised for this race total counts only money that flowed into committees clearly named for State Assembly in this cycle (e.g. "JOSH HOOVER for Assembly 2026"). The wider footprint shows every committee JOSH HOOVER controls during the same window — ballot-measure leadership PACs, future-office exploratory committees, officeholder accounts. A candidate raising large sums into non-electoral vehicles still shows where the institutional attention is. Both surfaces are honest; they answer different questions.