The money trail behind Congress.
PoliWealth tracks congressional trades, disclosure delays, lobbying, contracts, committees, and market context from public records. We show the receipts. You decide what they mean.
What PoliWealth is
A congressional money intelligence product that makes public disclosures easier to search, verify, share, and understand.
What PoliWealth is not
Not a broker. Not investment advice. Not a claim that a public-record signal proves illegality or intent.
Why it exists
Wall Street has terminals. Washington has receipts. PoliWealth gives regular people a faster way to see the record.
How to verify a receipt
A PoliWealth receipt should never ask you to trust a vibe. It should show the member, ticker, disclosed range, dates, lag when available, source context, and a path back to the public record or methodology.
Use /receipts or a short /r/ link to reach the canonical page.
Check transaction date, filing date, disclosed range, owner field, and source label.
Use source/document links and the Data Sources page for caveats and coverage.
Treat delay, committee, contract, lobbying, or cluster labels as review flags.
Press notes
Short description: PoliWealth is a public-record intelligence site for congressional money: trades, disclosure delays, lobbying, contracts, committees, and market context.
Suggested wording: “PoliWealth surfaced a public-record receipt showing…”
Avoid: language that implies guilt, insider trading, or investment advice unless supported by independent reporting and legal context.
Contact/corrections: use the correction link on receipt pages for record-specific issues.
Grand reveal line
Congress moves markets. We show the receipts.
The edge is the packaging. The proof is the public record. The user decides what the receipt means.
FAQ
Is PoliWealth accusing members of Congress of crimes?
No. PoliWealth surfaces public-record disclosures, filing delays, market context, and factual overlap signals. A signal is a reason to look closer, not a legal conclusion.
Is this investment advice?
No. PoliWealth is an accountability and research product. It does not recommend buying, selling, copying, or avoiding any security.
Where does the data come from?
The core records are public disclosures, member/committee data, and related public-record enrichment such as bills, lobbying, contracts, and market-symbol metadata. Every high-impact receipt should point back to a source or methodology trail.
Why do dates and dollar amounts look imprecise?
Congressional disclosure data is often filed after the transaction date and frequently reports dollar ranges instead of exact amounts. PoliWealth labels those limitations instead of pretending the data is more exact than it is.