2006 During the
United States 2006 election cycle, VoteVets.org PAC spent between $1.2 and $2 million (sources differ) trying to influence the outcomes of various congressional races. Senators targeted by the VoteVets' campaign for their support of the
Iraq War included Republicans
George Allen,
Rick Santorum,
Conrad Burns, and
Jim Talent. VoteVets claim was based, in part, on the
Republican senators' vote against an amendment offered by Democratic Louisiana Senator
Mary Landrieu, in 2003, to boost
National Guard and Reserves equipment funding by $1 billion. The group
FactCheck.org (a self-described non-partisan project of the
Annenberg Center at the
University of Pennsylvania) stated that the ad was misleading because the 2003 Senate budget amendment (on which the criticism was based) made no specific reference to "body armor". However, the progressive
Media Matters for America repeatedly pointed out what it said were "misleading" statements about the ads by FactCheck.org. The group also ran ads targeting now-former Republican Representatives
Melissa Hart,
Gil Gutknecht,
John Sweeney,
John Doolittle, and
Jon Porter. In that ad, an Iraq veteran, Tomas Young, who was paralyzed in Iraq, criticized the members of Congress for voting against increases in funding for veterans’ health care, while, in some cases, voting themselves a pay raise. The group also made a number of contributions to candidates, but only to those candidates who served during the wars in Iraq or Afghanistan. In 2006, out of all the Iraq or Afghanistan veterans running for Congress, VoteVets.org supported all but one of them (
Van Taylor, Republican in Texas). The endorsed candidates were:
Patrick Murphy (D-PA),
Joe Sestak (D-PA),
Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), Sam Schultz (R-IN), Andrew Duck (D-MD), and David Harris (D-TX). The group also supported
Tim Walz (D-MN), and
Chris Carney (D-PA). Murphy, Sestak, Walz, and Carney were all elected to Congress, and VoteVets.org’s site indicated they were endorsed for their 2008 reelection.
2008 VoteVets.org Political Action Committee continued to endorse Iraq and Afghanistan veterans for Congress in the 2008 elections. These included
Rick Noriega (D-TX) who ran for Senate in Texas against incumbent
John Cornyn, and many who ran for the House, including
John Boccieri (D-OH),
Michael D. Lumpkin (D-CA), Ashwin Madia (D-MN),
Jill Morgenthaler (D-IL),
Steve Sarvi (D-MN), and
Jonathan Powers (D-NY). The group endorsed candidates who are not Iraq or Afghanistan combat veterans, including
Eric Massa (D-NY), and
Gary Peters (D-MI), who had both served within the past decade. The group also held an on-line runoff, in which members were able to vote for one older veteran to endorse. That runoff was won by
Charlie Brown (D-CA), who the group endorsed. The group also endorsed the candidates who it endorsed in 2006 and reached Congress, Democratic Representatives
Patrick Murphy,
Joe Sestak,
Tim Walz, and
Chris Carney. Overall, VoteVets PAC contributed nearly $500,000 to candidates and other PACs during the 2008 election cycle. While VoteVets did not officially endorse a candidate for president in 2008, the group did publicly support
Barack Obama's plan for Iraq and actively opposed
John McCain's campaign for President, despite McCain being an honored war veteran. •
Bryan Lentz (PA-7) •
Tommy Sowers (MO-8) •
Manan Trivedi (PA-6) • then-Congressman
John Boccieri (OH-16) • then-Congressman
Chris Carney (PA-10) • then-Congressman
Walt Minnick (ID-1) • then-Congressman
Patrick Murphy (PA-8) • then-Congressman, now Senator
Gary Peters (MI-9) • then-Congressman
Joe Sestak (PA-7) • then-Congressman, now Governor
Tim Walz (MN-1)
2012 In 2012, VoteVets endorsed the following candidates for House and Senate in the general election: •
Bob Kerrey (NE-Senate) •
Richard Carmona (AZ-Senate) •
Tammy Duckworth (IL-8) •
Bill Enyart (IL-12) •
Tulsi Gabbard (HI-2) •
John Douglass (VA-5) •
Brendan Mullen (IN-2) • then-Congressman, now Senator
Gary Peters (MI-14) •
Manan Trivedi (PA-6) • then-Congressman, now Governor
Tim Walz (MN-1)
2014 In 2014, VoteVets endorsed the following candidates for House and Senate in the general election: • then-Congressman, now Senator
Gary Peters (MI-Senate) • Senator
Jack Reed (RI-Senate) • then-Congresswoman, now Senator
Tammy Duckworth (IL-8) • then-Congressman
Bill Enyart (IL-12) • Congresswoman
Tulsi Gabbard (HI-2) •
Ruben Gallego (AZ-7) •
Ted Lieu (CA-33) •
Seth Moulton (MA-6) •
Kevin Strouse (PA-8) •
Wesley Reed (TX-27) •
Jerry Cannon (MI-1) • then-Congressman, now Governor
Tim Walz (MN-1) •
Jim Mowrer (IA-4) •
Mark Takai (HI-1)
2016 In 2016, VoteVets endorsed the following candidates for House and Senate in the general election: • then-Congresswoman
Tammy Duckworth (IL-Senate) • then-Secretary of State
Jason Kander (MO-Senate) • Congresswoman
Tulsi Gabbard (HI-2) • then-Congressman, now Governor
Tim Walz (MN-1) • Congressman
Ruben Gallego (AZ-7) • Congressman
Ted Lieu (CA-33) • Congressman
Seth Moulton (MA-6) •
Anthony Brown (MD-4) •
Jim Mowrer (IA-3) •
Doug Applegate (CA-49) •
Mike Derrick (NY-21) •
John Plumb (NY-23) •
Salud Carbajal (CA-24) •
DuWayne Gregory (NY-2) •
Jimmy Panetta (CA-20) Additionally, the group endorsed a number of candidates for Governor: • Governor
John Bel Edwards (LA) • then-Lt. Governor
Ralph Northam (VA) •
Steve Hobbs (WA)
2018 In 2018, VoteVets endorsed the following candidates for House and Senate in the general election:
2024–2026 In 2024, VoteVets endorsed the following candidates for House and Senate in the general election: •
Ruben Gallego (AZ-Senate) – Congressman, now Senator •
Elissa Slotkin (MI-Senate) – Congresswoman, now Senator •
Tammy Baldwin (WI-Senate) – Senator Gallego defeated Republican Kari Lake and outperformed the presidential ticket by 8 percentage points. Slotkin won Michigan's Senate seat despite Donald Trump carrying the state. In 2025, VoteVets announced a $1 million investment to recruit over 100 veteran candidates for the 2026 midterm elections. The recruitment effort focused on competitive House and Senate races where military veteran candidates could leverage electoral advantages in swing districts. ==Action Fund==