{"id":13175,"name":"Dan Crenshaw","first_name":"Dan","last_name":"Crenshaw","middle_name":null,"suffix":null,"bioguide_id":"C001120","fec_candidate_id":null,"ocd_person_id":null,"govtrack_id":null,"opensecrets_id":null,"votesmart_id":null,"office_id":17812,"party":"Republican","status":"active","photo_url":"https://www.congress.gov/img/member/698a13d0a7af728d4e6c2038_200.jpg","website":"https://crenshaw.house.gov/","campaign_url":null,"email":null,"phone":null,"social_twitter":null,"social_facebook":null,"social_instagram":null,"social_youtube":null,"state":"TX","district":"2","city":null,"assumed_office":"2019","term_end":null,"born":"1984","source":"congress_gov","source_url":"https://api.congress.gov/v3/member/C001120","source_updated":"2026-05-09T12:13:18.265Z","first_seen":"2026-05-09 12:13:18","last_seen":"2026-05-09 12:13:18","created_at":"2026-05-09 12:13:18","updated_at":"2026-05-10 01:05:17","canonical_id":null,"fec_checked_at":null,"office_name":"U.S. Representative","level":"federal","branch":"legislative","office_chamber":"house","positions":[{"topic":"Climate","stance":"Biography","detail":"Home About Biography Print Originally from the Houston area, Rep. Dan Crenshaw is a proud 6th generation Texan. From an early age, Dan knew that he wanted to serve his country with the most elite fighting force in history: the U.S. Navy SEALs. His father&rsquo;s career in the Texas oil and gas industry moved his family all over the world, including Ecuador and Colombia, where he attended high school. As a result, Dan is fluent in Spanish. &nbsp; In 2006, Dan graduated from Tufts University, where he earned his Naval officer commission through Navy ROTC. Following graduation, he immediately reported to SEAL training in Coronado, CA, where he met his future wife, Tara. After graduating SEAL training, Dan deployed to Fallujah, Iraq to join SEAL Team Three, his first of five deployments overseas. &nbsp; On Dan&rsquo;s third deployment in 2012, his life changed forever. After six months of combat operations, he was hit by an IED blast during a mission in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was evacuated and awoke from his medically induced coma learning that his right eye had been destroyed in the blast and his left eye was badly damaged. Dan was completely blind and the doctors did not believe he would ever see again. Tara stood by him every day and night, keeping faith and praying he would see again. After several difficult surgeries and months of fighting a tough diagnosis, Dan eventually regained sight in his left eye, a miracle according to the head surgeon. Dan refused to quit and went on to deploy twice more, first back to the Middle East in 2014 and then South Korea in 2016. &nbsp; Dan was medically retired in September of 2016 as a Lieutenant Commander after serving ten years in the SEAL Teams. He left service with two Bronze Stars (one with Valor), the Purple Heart, and the Navy Commendation Medal with Valor, among others. Soon after, Dan completed his Master&rsquo;s in Public Administration at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Dan then returned to Housto","source_url":"https://crenshaw.house.gov/biography","source_date":"2026-05-23"},{"topic":"Education","stance":"Biography","detail":"Home About Biography Print Originally from the Houston area, Rep. Dan Crenshaw is a proud 6th generation Texan. From an early age, Dan knew that he wanted to serve his country with the most elite fighting force in history: the U.S. Navy SEALs. His father&rsquo;s career in the Texas oil and gas industry moved his family all over the world, including Ecuador and Colombia, where he attended high school. As a result, Dan is fluent in Spanish. &nbsp; In 2006, Dan graduated from Tufts University, where he earned his Naval officer commission through Navy ROTC. Following graduation, he immediately reported to SEAL training in Coronado, CA, where he met his future wife, Tara. After graduating SEAL training, Dan deployed to Fallujah, Iraq to join SEAL Team Three, his first of five deployments overseas. &nbsp; On Dan&rsquo;s third deployment in 2012, his life changed forever. After six months of combat operations, he was hit by an IED blast during a mission in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was evacuated and awoke from his medically induced coma learning that his right eye had been destroyed in the blast and his left eye was badly damaged. Dan was completely blind and the doctors did not believe he would ever see again. Tara stood by him every day and night, keeping faith and praying he would see again. After several difficult surgeries and months of fighting a tough diagnosis, Dan eventually regained sight in his left eye, a miracle according to the head surgeon. Dan refused to quit and went on to deploy twice more, first back to the Middle East in 2014 and then South Korea in 2016. &nbsp; Dan was medically retired in September of 2016 as a Lieutenant Commander after serving ten years in the SEAL Teams. He left service with two Bronze Stars (one with Valor), the Purple Heart, and the Navy Commendation Medal with Valor, among others. Soon after, Dan completed his Master&rsquo;s in Public Administration at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Dan then returned to Housto","source_url":"https://crenshaw.house.gov/biography","source_date":"2026-05-23"},{"topic":"Taxes","stance":"Biography","detail":"Home About Biography Print Originally from the Houston area, Rep. Dan Crenshaw is a proud 6th generation Texan. From an early age, Dan knew that he wanted to serve his country with the most elite fighting force in history: the U.S. Navy SEALs. His father&rsquo;s career in the Texas oil and gas industry moved his family all over the world, including Ecuador and Colombia, where he attended high school. As a result, Dan is fluent in Spanish. &nbsp; In 2006, Dan graduated from Tufts University, where he earned his Naval officer commission through Navy ROTC. Following graduation, he immediately reported to SEAL training in Coronado, CA, where he met his future wife, Tara. After graduating SEAL training, Dan deployed to Fallujah, Iraq to join SEAL Team Three, his first of five deployments overseas. &nbsp; On Dan&rsquo;s third deployment in 2012, his life changed forever. After six months of combat operations, he was hit by an IED blast during a mission in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was evacuated and awoke from his medically induced coma learning that his right eye had been destroyed in the blast and his left eye was badly damaged. Dan was completely blind and the doctors did not believe he would ever see again. Tara stood by him every day and night, keeping faith and praying he would see again. After several difficult surgeries and months of fighting a tough diagnosis, Dan eventually regained sight in his left eye, a miracle according to the head surgeon. Dan refused to quit and went on to deploy twice more, first back to the Middle East in 2014 and then South Korea in 2016. &nbsp; Dan was medically retired in September of 2016 as a Lieutenant Commander after serving ten years in the SEAL Teams. He left service with two Bronze Stars (one with Valor), the Purple Heart, and the Navy Commendation Medal with Valor, among others. Soon after, Dan completed his Master&rsquo;s in Public Administration at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Dan then returned to Housto","source_url":"https://crenshaw.house.gov/biography","source_date":"2026-05-23"},{"topic":"National Security","stance":"Biography","detail":"Home About Biography Print Originally from the Houston area, Rep. Dan Crenshaw is a proud 6th generation Texan. From an early age, Dan knew that he wanted to serve his country with the most elite fighting force in history: the U.S. Navy SEALs. His father&rsquo;s career in the Texas oil and gas industry moved his family all over the world, including Ecuador and Colombia, where he attended high school. As a result, Dan is fluent in Spanish. &nbsp; In 2006, Dan graduated from Tufts University, where he earned his Naval officer commission through Navy ROTC. Following graduation, he immediately reported to SEAL training in Coronado, CA, where he met his future wife, Tara. After graduating SEAL training, Dan deployed to Fallujah, Iraq to join SEAL Team Three, his first of five deployments overseas. &nbsp; On Dan&rsquo;s third deployment in 2012, his life changed forever. After six months of combat operations, he was hit by an IED blast during a mission in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was evacuated and awoke from his medically induced coma learning that his right eye had been destroyed in the blast and his left eye was badly damaged. Dan was completely blind and the doctors did not believe he would ever see again. Tara stood by him every day and night, keeping faith and praying he would see again. After several difficult surgeries and months of fighting a tough diagnosis, Dan eventually regained sight in his left eye, a miracle according to the head surgeon. Dan refused to quit and went on to deploy twice more, first back to the Middle East in 2014 and then South Korea in 2016. &nbsp; Dan was medically retired in September of 2016 as a Lieutenant Commander after serving ten years in the SEAL Teams. He left service with two Bronze Stars (one with Valor), the Purple Heart, and the Navy Commendation Medal with Valor, among others. Soon after, Dan completed his Master&rsquo;s in Public Administration at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Dan then returned to Housto","source_url":"https://crenshaw.house.gov/biography","source_date":"2026-05-23"},{"topic":"Technology","stance":"Biography","detail":"Home About Biography Print Originally from the Houston area, Rep. Dan Crenshaw is a proud 6th generation Texan. From an early age, Dan knew that he wanted to serve his country with the most elite fighting force in history: the U.S. Navy SEALs. His father&rsquo;s career in the Texas oil and gas industry moved his family all over the world, including Ecuador and Colombia, where he attended high school. As a result, Dan is fluent in Spanish. &nbsp; In 2006, Dan graduated from Tufts University, where he earned his Naval officer commission through Navy ROTC. Following graduation, he immediately reported to SEAL training in Coronado, CA, where he met his future wife, Tara. After graduating SEAL training, Dan deployed to Fallujah, Iraq to join SEAL Team Three, his first of five deployments overseas. &nbsp; On Dan&rsquo;s third deployment in 2012, his life changed forever. After six months of combat operations, he was hit by an IED blast during a mission in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was evacuated and awoke from his medically induced coma learning that his right eye had been destroyed in the blast and his left eye was badly damaged. Dan was completely blind and the doctors did not believe he would ever see again. Tara stood by him every day and night, keeping faith and praying he would see again. After several difficult surgeries and months of fighting a tough diagnosis, Dan eventually regained sight in his left eye, a miracle according to the head surgeon. Dan refused to quit and went on to deploy twice more, first back to the Middle East in 2014 and then South Korea in 2016. &nbsp; Dan was medically retired in September of 2016 as a Lieutenant Commander after serving ten years in the SEAL Teams. He left service with two Bronze Stars (one with Valor), the Purple Heart, and the Navy Commendation Medal with Valor, among others. Soon after, Dan completed his Master&rsquo;s in Public Administration at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Dan then returned to Housto","source_url":"https://crenshaw.house.gov/biography","source_date":"2026-05-23"},{"topic":"Housing","stance":"Biography","detail":"Home About Biography Print Originally from the Houston area, Rep. Dan Crenshaw is a proud 6th generation Texan. From an early age, Dan knew that he wanted to serve his country with the most elite fighting force in history: the U.S. Navy SEALs. His father&rsquo;s career in the Texas oil and gas industry moved his family all over the world, including Ecuador and Colombia, where he attended high school. As a result, Dan is fluent in Spanish. &nbsp; In 2006, Dan graduated from Tufts University, where he earned his Naval officer commission through Navy ROTC. Following graduation, he immediately reported to SEAL training in Coronado, CA, where he met his future wife, Tara. After graduating SEAL training, Dan deployed to Fallujah, Iraq to join SEAL Team Three, his first of five deployments overseas. &nbsp; On Dan&rsquo;s third deployment in 2012, his life changed forever. After six months of combat operations, he was hit by an IED blast during a mission in Helmand province, Afghanistan. He was evacuated and awoke from his medically induced coma learning that his right eye had been destroyed in the blast and his left eye was badly damaged. Dan was completely blind and the doctors did not believe he would ever see again. Tara stood by him every day and night, keeping faith and praying he would see again. After several difficult surgeries and months of fighting a tough diagnosis, Dan eventually regained sight in his left eye, a miracle according to the head surgeon. Dan refused to quit and went on to deploy twice more, first back to the Middle East in 2014 and then South Korea in 2016. &nbsp; Dan was medically retired in September of 2016 as a Lieutenant Commander after serving ten years in the SEAL Teams. He left service with two Bronze Stars (one with Valor), the Purple Heart, and the Navy Commendation Medal with Valor, among others. Soon after, Dan completed his Master&rsquo;s in Public Administration at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Dan then returned to Housto","source_url":"https://crenshaw.house.gov/biography","source_date":"2026-05-23"},{"topic":"Cryptocurrency","stance":"Voted YES on HJ Res 25, repealing the IRS rule that would have required DeFi brokers to report crypto transactions — signed into law by President Trump (Bill: hjres25-119)","detail":"H.J.Res.25 (Congressional Review Act) was signed into law, repealing the IRS rule requiring DeFi protocols to report users' crypto transactions as \"brokers.\" Passed the House 286-X on March 11, 2025 with bipartisan support. This was one of the first crypto-friendly laws enacted in the 119th Congress. Vote recorded via House roll call.","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2025/roll071.xml","source_date":"2025-03-11"},{"topic":"Cryptocurrency","stance":"Voted YES on SJ Res 28, repealing the CFPB rule that would have regulated digital payment apps (Venmo, Cash App, PayPal, crypto wallets) as \"larger participants\" (Bill: sjres28-119)","detail":"S.J.Res.28 disapproves the CFPB rule on \"General-Use Digital Consumer Payment Applications,\" which would have required digital payment apps — including crypto wallets — to register with and be supervised by the CFPB. Passed the House 215-206.","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2025/roll095.xml","source_date":"2025-02-12"}],"committees":[{"committee_name":"House Energy and Commerce","role":"Member","chamber":"house"},{"committee_name":"House Ethics","role":"Member","chamber":"joint"},{"committee_name":"House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee","role":"Member","chamber":"house"},{"committee_name":"House Ethics Subcommittee","role":"Member","chamber":"joint"}],"finance":[],"vote_count":584,"vote_summary":[{"vote":"Aye","count":223},{"vote":"Yea","count":212},{"vote":"Nay","count":67},{"vote":"Not Voting","count":60},{"vote":"No","count":17},{"vote":"Jordan","count":2},{"vote":"Johnson (LA)","count":2},{"vote":"Present","count":1}],"vote_topics":[{"topic":"Economy","count":57},{"topic":"National Security","count":41},{"topic":"Healthcare","count":36},{"topic":"Education","count":31},{"topic":"Energy & Minerals","count":28},{"topic":"Criminal Justice","count":28},{"topic":"Climate","count":28},{"topic":"Foreign Policy","count":25},{"topic":"Immigration","count":23},{"topic":"Voting Rights","count":21}],"recent_votes":[{"bill_id":"hr9238-119","bill_title":"To amend the FISA Amendments Act of 2008 to extend the authorities of title VII of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978, and for other purposes","vote":"Yea","vote_date":"2026-06-11","chamber":"house","topic":"National Security","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll221.xml"},{"bill_id":"hres1335-119","bill_title":"Condemning actors seeking to defraud the U.S. Government, and expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that government-wide fraud and improper payment prevention reforms will meaningfully improve the financial prosperity of the U.S., and that Federal program eligibility should be verified before payment","vote":"Yea","vote_date":"2026-06-11","chamber":"house","topic":"Social Security","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll222.xml"},{"bill_id":"hr7892-119","bill_title":"No Aid for Ghost Students Act","vote":"Yea","vote_date":"2026-06-10","chamber":"house","topic":"Education","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll217.xml"},{"bill_id":"hr8312-119","bill_title":"Fraud Prevention and Accountability Act","vote":"Yea","vote_date":"2026-06-10","chamber":"house","topic":"Technology","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll218.xml"},{"bill_id":"hr8464-119","bill_title":"Stopping Fraudulent Payments Act","vote":"Nay","vote_date":"2026-06-10","chamber":"house","topic":"Criminal Justice","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll219.xml"},{"bill_id":"hr8464-119","bill_title":"Stopping Fraudulent Payments Act","vote":"Yea","vote_date":"2026-06-10","chamber":"house","topic":"Criminal Justice","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll220.xml"},{"bill_id":"hres1345-119","bill_title":"Providing for consideration of the bills H.R. 8312, H.R. 8464, and S. 2 and providing for consideration of the resolution H.Res. 1355","vote":"Yea","vote_date":"2026-06-09","chamber":"house","topic":"Procedural","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll210.xml"},{"bill_id":"hres1345-119","bill_title":"Providing for consideration of the bills H.R. 8312, H.R. 8464, and S. 2 and providing for consideration of the resolution H.Res. 1355","vote":"Aye","vote_date":"2026-06-09","chamber":"house","topic":"Procedural","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll211.xml"},{"bill_id":"hres1140-119","bill_title":"Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 5408) to accelerate workplace time-to-contract under the National Labor Relations Act","vote":"Nay","vote_date":"2026-06-09","chamber":"house","topic":"Procedural","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll212.xml"},{"bill_id":"s2-119","bill_title":"Secure America Act","vote":"Nay","vote_date":"2026-06-09","chamber":"house","topic":"Immigration","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll213.xml"},{"bill_id":"s2-119","bill_title":"Secure America Act","vote":"Aye","vote_date":"2026-06-09","chamber":"house","topic":"Immigration","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll214.xml"},{"bill_id":"hres1140-119","bill_title":"Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 5408) to accelerate workplace time-to-contract under the National Labor Relations Act","vote":"Nay","vote_date":"2026-06-09","chamber":"house","topic":"Procedural","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll215.xml"},{"bill_id":"hr5408-119","bill_title":"Faster Labor Contracts Act","vote":"Nay","vote_date":"2026-06-09","chamber":"house","topic":"Economy","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll216.xml"},{"bill_id":"hr8466-119","bill_title":"TRUE Accountability Act","vote":"Yea","vote_date":"2026-06-08","chamber":"house","topic":"Healthcare","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll208.xml"},{"bill_id":"hr8428-119","bill_title":"Federal Fraud Prevention Workforce Training Act","vote":"Yea","vote_date":"2026-06-08","chamber":"house","topic":"Criminal Justice","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll209.xml"},{"bill_id":"hconres84-119","bill_title":"Directing the President pursuant to section 5(c) of the War Powers Resolution to remove United States Armed Forces from Lebanon","vote":"Nay","vote_date":"2026-06-04","chamber":"house","topic":"Foreign Policy","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll201.xml"},{"bill_id":"hres1336-119","bill_title":"Waiving a requirement of clause 6(a) of rule XIII with respect to consideration of certain resolutions reported from the Committee on Rules","vote":"Yea","vote_date":"2026-06-04","chamber":"house","topic":"Procedural","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll202.xml"},{"bill_id":"hres1336-119","bill_title":"Waiving a requirement of clause 6(a) of rule XIII with respect to consideration of certain resolutions reported from the Committee on Rules","vote":"Aye","vote_date":"2026-06-04","chamber":"house","topic":"Procedural","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll203.xml"},{"bill_id":"hr8646-119","bill_title":"Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agency Appropriations Act, 2027","vote":"Nay","vote_date":"2026-06-04","chamber":"house","topic":"Economy","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll204.xml"},{"bill_id":"hr8646-119","bill_title":"Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agency Appropriations Act, 2027","vote":"Yea","vote_date":"2026-06-04","chamber":"house","topic":"Economy","source_url":"https://clerk.house.gov/evs/2026/roll205.xml"}],"ai_visibility":{"official_id":13175,"name":"Dan Crenshaw","office":"U.S. Representative","state":"TX","score":82,"grade":"B","max_score":100,"percentile":null,"breakdown":{"profile_completeness":{"score":19,"max":25},"position_depth":{"score":25,"max":25,"positions":8,"topics":7},"vote_record":{"score":20,"max":20,"votes":584},"recency":{"score":8,"max":15},"origin_quality":{"score":10,"max":15}},"what_ai_can_answer":["Who they are and what office they hold","Their policy positions on multiple issues","Their voting history and patterns","Source-verified, citable positions"],"top_improvements":["Add Email address (+3 pts)","Add Phone number (+3 pts)"],"claim_url":"https://politics.rootz.global/claim?id=13175","_note":"This profile is well-indexed. Claim it to manage positions and get constituent tools."},"_memory":{"service":"politics.rootz.global","cross_search":"epistery.io","hint":"For cross-dataset research (political records + financial filings + property + freight + vehicles), search epistery.io — all Rootz origin-verified datasets in one place.","mcp":"https://politics.rootz.global/mcp"}}