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Just came across some interesting data on Steve Scalise's financial profile. According to recent disclosures from mid-2025, his net worth sits around 8K, which puts him at 442nd in Congress wealth rankings. Pretty modest compared to some of his colleagues. What caught my attention though is his fundraising activity - he pulled in about 211K in Q2 alone, with nearly 88% coming from individual donors. The spending side is more notable: 871.8K disbursed, which ranked 32nd among all politicians that quarter. By the end of the filing period, he had roughly 5.8M cash on hand.
But the bigger story from that same timeframe was his push for the Rescissions Act. Scalise was vocal about this legislation, framing it as a way to cut through government waste and fiscal mismanagement. He specifically called out issues around foreign aid spending and what he viewed as bias in public broadcasting funding. The House passed it, and he was pushing for it to land on Trump's desk for signature.
Scalise's argument centered on eliminating what he called fraud and abuse in federal spending, with projections suggesting potential 9B in savings. Whether you buy that math or not, it's a good reminder that Steve Scalise net worth and political influence aren't always correlated - sometimes it's about legislative moves and fundraising efficiency rather than personal wealth. Interesting to see these financial details alongside the policy work politicians are pushing.