Armando Martinez
Texas House of Representatives District 39
$7,216Cash on Hand
$284,891Total Contributions
$539,113Total Expenditures
Are you Armando Martinez, or someone associated with their campaign? Learn about the benefits of claiming your page - it's free.
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions
Name
Type
$20,000.00 Border Health PAC ENTITY
$20,000.00 Suleyman Baltaoglu INDIVIDUAL
$14,825.00 Blackridge Consulting LLP ENTITY
$6,500.00 Texas Deer Association Political Action Committee ENTITY
$6,000.00 Texas Sands PAC ENTITY
$6,000.00 Texas Trial Lawyers Association PAC ENTITY
$5,000.00 Abraham Tanus INDIVIDUAL
$5,000.00 Halff Associates State PAC ENTITY
$5,000.00 Mohamed Sharaf INDIVIDUAL
$5,000.00 Texas Building Branch Associated General Contractors PAC ENTITY
View All Contributors
Top Payees
Total Expenditures
Payee
Type
$72,562.66 Armando Martinez INDIVIDUAL
$54,931.30 Citibank Mastercard ENTITY
$48,000.00 Mid Valley Care LLC ENTITY
$43,940.91 AMLI Eastside Apartments ENTITY
$14,001.38 Change Research ENTITY
$12,125.45 American Airlines ENTITY
$9,884.66 Citi Cards ENTITY
$9,665.12 Brand Boosters Co LLC ENTITY
$9,020.00 Hachar Media ENTITY
$8,774.24 Texas House of Representatives ENTITY
View All Payees
Top Loans
Amount
Lender
Type
$4,000.00Armando MartinezINDIVIDUAL
$3,000.00Armando MartinezINDIVIDUAL
View All Loans
Top Personal Contributions

From reports filed by the recipients of these funds, it appears these transactions originated from personal rather than campaign accounts.

No Records

View All Personal Activity
Related Articles
Transparency USA | 11/17/2021
In July, a group of Democratic legislators left Austin, with some traveling to Washington, D.C., in an effort to break the quorum of the Texas Legislature to prevent action on Gov. Greg Abbott’s special session agenda. 
Transparency USA | 09/17/2021
The latest campaign finance reports reveal that the Texas Democrats who broke quorum collected $491,000 between their July 12 departure and the end of the first special session. Over 25 percent of that money came from out-of-state donors.