IRS — Employee Political Donations

Employees of IRS donated $495K to federal campaigns from 141 donors. See party breakdown and state-by-state analysis.

Overview

$495K
Total Donated
141
Contributing Employees
$4K
Avg per Donor

Political Giving Analysis

Employees of IRS have collectively donated $495K to federal political campaigns, making it one of the more politically active workforces tracked in FEC filings. A total of 141 individual employees have made itemized contributions, averaging $4K per donor.

IRS employees overwhelmingly favor the Democratic Party, directing 86% of all donations ($100K) to Democratic candidates and committees. This strong partisan lean is consistent across the workforce.

Geographically, IRS employee donors are concentrated in California ($64K), followed by Texas ($63K), Virginia ($31K), New York ($30K). This distribution typically reflects where the company has major offices and operations.

Note: These donations are made by individual employees and do not represent corporate political activity. IRS as an organization may have separate PAC spending or lobbying activities not reflected in individual contribution data. All data is sourced from FEC public disclosure filings.

Party Breakdown

DEM$100K (86%)
REP$14K (12%)
IND$1K (1%)
GRE$1K (1%)
OTH$700 (1%)
Democratic Donations ($100K)Republican Donations ($14K)Independent Donations ($1K)Green Donations ($1K)OTH Donations ($700)

Top States

StateAmount
California$64K
Texas$63K
Virginia$31K
New York$30K
Maryland$23K
Tennessee$22K
Pennsylvania$19K
Missouri$19K
West Virginia$18K
Georgia$17K

Frequently Asked Questions

How much have IRS employees donated to political campaigns?

141 employees of IRS have donated a total of $495K to federal political campaigns. The average donation per employee is $4K.

Which party do IRS employees favor?

IRS employee donations break down as: DEM: $100K, REP: $14K, IND: $1K, GRE: $1K, OTH: $700.

Where are IRS employee donors located?

IRS employee donors are spread across multiple states. The top states by donation volume are: California ($64K), Texas ($63K), Virginia ($31K), New York ($30K), Maryland ($23K).

Where does this employer donation data come from?

All data is sourced from FEC public filings. Federal law requires committees to report the employer of individuals who contribute more than $200 in an election cycle. IRS as an organization does not necessarily endorse these contributions.