Referred to Rules Committee
Nanette Diaz Barragán
Current Focus
119th Congress · 2025–2027Barragán's most active focus in the 119th Congress has been Environment & Energy (7 actions), along with secondary work on Health Care and Infrastructure.
- Environment & Energy 7 actions
- Health Care 4 actions
- Infrastructure 2 actions
- Sponsored 119-hres1402 — Supporting the goals and ideals of Alzheimer's and Brain Awareness Month. 35 cosponsors
- Sponsored 119-hr7057 — Returning Home Act 14 cosponsors
- Sponsored 119-hr6839 — Vaccine Transportation Access Act 12 cosponsors
- Sponsored 119-hr5840 — To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to allow charitable donations of food transportation vehicles and food storage equipment to receive the same tax treatment as charitable donations of food inventory in the case of donations to nonprofit organizations which provide food to communities in need. 26 cosponsors
Recent Activity
Last 14 days-
2026-07-14
-
2026-07-14
-
2026-07-14
-
2026-07-13
-
2026-07-13
Nanette Diaz Barragán is a Democratic Representative representing California's 44th District in the 119th Congress (2025–2027). Now in their 5th term, they have cast 361 recorded votes, seen 81 measures become law. They won their 2024 election with 71.4% of the vote, a 42.8-point margin. Up for re-election November 2026.
How congressional sessions work
Each numbered Congress spans two calendar years and is divided into two sessions: the first session (odd-numbered year, e.g., 2025) and the second session (even-numbered year, e.g., 2026). Modern Congresses begin on January 3 of odd-numbered years and end on January 3 two years later, unless a law sets a different date. The House is elected every two years, while Senators serve six-year terms staggered so that roughly one-third of the Senate is up for election every two years.
Legislative Record
Protecting Privacy in Purchases Act
Referred to Financial Services Committee
Sunshine Protection Act of 2025
Referred to Energy and Commerce Committee
Improving Travel for American Families Act
Referred to Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee; Homeland Security Committee
Weatherizing Infrastructure in the North and Terrorism Emergency Readiness Act of 2025
Referred to Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee; Homeland Security Committee
Referred to Rules Committee
Referred to Foreign Affairs Committee
Referred to Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee; Judiciary Committee; Energy and Commerce Committee
TRIA Program Reauthorization Act of 2026
Referred to Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee; Financial Services Committee
Financial Exploitation Prevention Act of 2025
Referred to Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee; Financial Services Committee
Small Business Lending Fraud Prevention Act
Referred to Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee; Small Business Committee
Small Business Technological Advancement Act
Referred to Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee; Small Business Committee
Referred to Intelligence (Permanent Select) Committee; Judiciary Committee
Referred to Oversight and Government Reform Committee
Stopping Fraudulent Payments Act
Referred to Oversight and Government Reform Committee
Fraud Prevention and Accountability Act
Referred to Oversight and Government Reform Committee
No Aid for Ghost Students Act of 2026
Referred to Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee; Education and Workforce Committee
Referred to Rules Committee
Referred to Rules Committee
Committee memberships will load automatically if available.
No sponsored bills found for the 119th Congress session.
Election History
Source: MIT Election Data + Science Lab
Current Election Status
Campaign Finance (FEC)
Source: Federal Election Commission · Candidate ID: H6CA44103 · Through 05/13/2026 · 2026 Cycle
Federal Spending in Your District
Federal dollars obligated to this district in FY2025. Reflects ongoing programs and prior authorizations — not decisions by the current officeholder.
Top agencies (FY2025)
Top awards (FY2025)
How Nanette Diaz Barragán voted on recent appropriations bills
Appropriations bills authorize and fund the programs reflected above. This is Nanette Diaz Barragán's recorded position on the most recent 10 — not a claim that these votes caused the spending figures.
Source: USASpending.gov. Voting records via official House/Senate clerk roll-call data. District map: post-2020 census (118th/119th Congress).
What The Facts Score
Measured from public voting records, Census district demographics, and CRS bill data. Not an editorial judgment — the same formula applies to every member regardless of party.
Sources: Congress.gov · Census Bureau ACS 5-Year Estimates · Legislative Dossier on The Honest Copy
California Congressional Delegation
Other members of the 119th Congress representing California. View full California delegation
Frequently Asked Questions
How did Nanette Diaz Barragán win their last election?
Nanette Diaz Barragán won the 2024 general election with 71.4% of the vote (164,765 votes), winning by a margin of 42.8 points against 1 opponent.
When is Nanette Diaz Barragán up for re-election?
Nanette Diaz Barragán is up for re-election in 2026. Election Day is November 3, 2026. Their current term ends January 3, 2027. They have served 5 terms in this office. All 435 House seats are up every two years.
What is Nanette Diaz Barragán's current election status?
Nanette Diaz Barragán's current term ends January 3, 2027. They are up for re-election on November 3, 2026. House members serve two-year terms and face election every cycle.
How much campaign money has Nanette Diaz Barragán raised?
According to FEC filings, Nanette Diaz Barragán has raised $669,609 in campaign funds, spent $1,064,461, and has $1,086,701 cash on hand.
What is the difference between campaign funds and office spending?
Campaign funds are raised from donors for election purposes and regulated by the FEC. Office spending (MRA) is a separate taxpayer-funded budget allocated to each House member for staff salaries, rent, travel, and official duties. The two cannot be mixed — campaign money cannot pay for official expenses and vice versa.