Jon L. Kyl
- Party
- Republican
- Latest Office Held:
- US Senate, AZ
- Latest Office Sought:
- US Senate, AZ
Jon Llewellyn Kyl (pronounced /ˈkaɪl/; born April 25, 1942) is the Republican junior U.S. Senator representing Arizona. He is currently the Senate Minority Whip, tasked with maintaining party discipline. Jon Kyl was born in the Midwest and moved to Arizona for college and law school. He later married and launched his career in Arizona. He ran for the House of Representatives in 1986 and then the United States Senate in 1994. He has been in the Senate since 1995.
Source: Wikipedia
Campaign Finance
$21,416,379 ReceivedFigures are based on itemized contributions reported to the Federal Election Commission and state agencies. Please note that:
- contributions under $200 are not reported, and so are not included in totals.
- only contributions from individuals and organizations to candidates are included. Various accounting measures and more exotic contribution types are excluded.
- contributions are matched based on organization and recipient name reported within each election cycle. Contributions using an incorrect or non-standard version of the name may be missed.
- corporate name changes and mergers may cause figures to differ from those of the Center for Responsive Politics.
- organization totals include known subsidiaries of the organization.
For more information, please see our campaign finance methodology page. Lobbyist bundling data is described on our lobbyist bundling methodology page.
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Top Industries
OpenSecrets.org and FollowTheMoney.org classify contribution data into about 100 industries.81% of the total amount raised came from an identifiable industry. -
In State vs. Out of State
contributions from individuals, in dollars -
Individuals vs. PACs
in dollars -
Top Contributors
- Employee Color Block
- Employees
- PAC Color Block
- PAC
Earmarks
$176,094,500 AllocatedFigures are based on both committee earmark disclosures and on analysis of appropriations bill text. Table shows top 10 earmarks, ordered by dollar amount in the final version of the bill. Earmarks from the president's budget proposal are not included.
For more information, see our Earmark Methodology page.
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In State vs. Out of State
in dollars -
Top Earmarks
Fiscal Year Amount Description 2009 $25,095,000 Center for Civic Education for two programs - We the People and Cooperative Education Exchange - that are authorized in the Elementary and Secondary Education Act as part of the Civic Education program 2008 $20,000,000 Ballistic Missile Defense Terminal Defense Segment -- Joint short-range ballistic missile defense 2009 $15,000,000 Fire/Crash Rescue Station 2008 $10,870,000 Field Maintenance Shop 2008 $10,824,000 Tres Rios, AZ 2009 $9,570,000 Tres Rios, AZ 2008 $7,868,000 Tucson Drainage Area 2008 $5,500,000 Repair Airfield Pavements 2010 $5,250,000 Hoover Dam Bypass Bridge, AZ 2009 $5,019,000 National Council on Economic Education for the Cooperative Education Exchange program, which is authorized in the Elementary and Secondary Education Act as part of the Civic Education Program