Goblin House
Area: Full Workup (one official, all sections) (eo_full_workup)
Filed: 2026-05-02T00:55:48.847Z
Source: External LLM via /handoff/congress (attempt #74124)
Resolved official: J. Luis Correa (entity #11105)
Ingest result: 46 facts · 47 sources · 2 silences · 3 contradictions · 9 voting_records · 6 skipped
Single super-prompt covering every per-official research area in one LLM call: donor mapping, silences, contradictions, telling votes, and constituency baseline. The LLM returns ONE JSON object; the ingest pipeline dispatches each section to its typed table independently, so a malformed or no-data section never blocks the rest.
{ "target_official": { "name": "J. Luis Correa", "bioguide_id": "C001110" }, "donor_mapping": { "facts": [ { "fact_text": "Correa's career (2015-2024) campaign committee raised $5,897,286 with top industry Pharmaceuticals/Health Products at $368,023. Top career contributor: Blue Cross/Blue Shield at $56,700.", "date_occurred": "2024-12-31", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/summary?cid=N00037260&cycle=Career" }, { "fact_text": "American Israel Public Affairs Cmte routed $16,294 via 25 payments to Lou Correa for Congress in the 2024 cycle, ranking as the third-largest payor after ActBlue ($161,590) and the New Democrat Coalition ($34,100).", "date_occurred": "2024-12-31", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/campaign-expenditures/vendor?vendor=Lou+Correa+For+Congress" }, { "fact_text": "Correa's 2025 campaign disclosed $243.2K in Q3 2025 fundraising, with 46.1% from individual donors and $2.3M cash on hand. Quiver Quantitative estimates his net worth at $6.4M — the 146th highest in Congress.", "date_occurred": "2025-10-12", "confidence": "primary", "source_url": "https://www.quiverquant.com/news/Fundraising+Update:+Representative+J.+Luis+Correa+just+disclosed+$243.2K+of+new+fundraising" }, { "fact_text": "Top PAC donors at $10,000 each in the 2024 cycle: National Auto Dealers Assn, Carpenters & Joiners Union, American Council of Engineering Cos, Edwards Lifesciences, Blue Dog PAC, American Crystal Sugar, Home Depot, UNITE HERE, Machinists/Aerospace Workers Union, Merck & Co, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, American Society of Anesthesiologists, National Assn of Realtors, and American Bankers Assn.", "date_occurred": "2024-12-31", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/campaign-expenditures/vendor?vendor=Lou+Correa+For+Congress" }, { "fact_text": "AFL-CIO gives Correa a 92% score for 2025 and 91% lifetime score. CWA endorsed Correa in 2016. He voted Yea on the PRO Act (H.R. 842) and Yea on H.R. 2550 (Protecting America's Workforce Act).", "date_occurred": "2025-12-31", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://aflcio.org/scorecard/legislators/j-correa?page=0&order=title&sort=asc" }, { "fact_text": "Correa left the Blue Dog Coalition in January 2023 over a 'rebranding rift' after serving as a member of the centrist Democratic caucus. He had been endorsed by both the Blue Dogs and New Democrat Coalition in prior cycles.", "date_occurred": "2023-01-24", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.powervoter.us/2023/01/24/rebranding-rift-guts-blue-dog-dem-ranks/" }, { "fact_text": "Stand With Crypto rates Correa as 'Strongly supports crypto' based on 6 votes, including for the CLARITY Act and GENIUS Act. However, the AFL-CIO scored his vote on H.R. 3633 (Digital Asset Market Clarity Act) as voting 'against working people' for enabling crypto industry operation without effective oversight.", "date_occurred": "2025-07-17", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.standwithcrypto.org/legislator/lou-correa/" }, { "fact_text": "Correa's 2024 campaign reported the Democratic Congressional Campaign Cmte as its second-largest vendor ($225,057). Think Inc was the largest vendor at $314,565 for fundraising services.", "date_occurred": "2024-12-31", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/expenditures?cid=N00037260&cycle=2024" } ], "connections": [ { "donor_entity_name": "American Israel Public Affairs Cmte", "relationship_type": "pac_donor", "description": "2024 cycle: $16,294 via 25 payments to Lou Correa for Congress — third-largest payor. Correa voted for Israel security supplemental appropriations H.R. 6126 (November 2023), H.R. 7217 (February 2024), and H.R. 8034 (April 2024). He called for a 'temporary ceasefire' in December 2023 but did not condition aid.", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/campaign-expenditures/vendor?vendor=Lou+Correa+For+Congress" }, { "donor_entity_name": "Blue Cross/Blue Shield", "relationship_type": "major_donor", "description": "Career (2015-2024): $56,700 ($19,700 individuals, $37,000 PAC) — top overall contributor. Correa sits on the House Homeland Security Committee and is ranking member of the Border Security and Enforcement Subcommittee.", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/summary?cid=N00037260&cycle=Career" }, { "donor_entity_name": "American Society of Anesthesiologists", "relationship_type": "pac_donor", "description": "Career: $50,000 all PAC. Also contributed $10,000 via 3 payments in the 2024 cycle. Pharmaceuticals/Health Products is Correa's top career industry at $368,023.", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/summary?cid=N00037260&cycle=Career" }, { "donor_entity_name": "National Assn of Realtors", "relationship_type": "pac_donor", "description": "Career: $49,025 ($25 individuals, $49,000 PAC). Additional $10,000 via 4 payments in the 2024 cycle. Real Estate is Correa's second-largest career industry at $363,841.", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/summary?cid=N00037260&cycle=Career" }, { "donor_entity_name": "International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers", "relationship_type": "pac_donor", "description": "Career: $49,000 all PAC. Additional $10,000 via 4 payments in the 2024 cycle.", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/members-of-congress/summary?cid=N00037260&cycle=Career" }, { "donor_entity_name": "New Democrat Coalition", "relationship_type": "pac_donor", "description": "Career: $49,950 ($29,950 individuals, $20,000 PAC). Routed $34,100 via 11 payments in the 2024 cycle — second-largest payor.", "confidence": "secondary", "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/campaign-expenditures/vendor?vendor=Lou+Correa+For+Congress" } ] }, "silences": [ { "topic": "Correa has held no traditional open in-person town halls — focusing instead on 'Know Your Rights' immigration events and community conversations with pre-determined topics", "expected_position": "As the elected representative of 757,342 constituents in a majority-Hispanic district, Correa would be expected to hold regular open forums where voters can ask unfiltered questions on any topic — particularly given his centrist voting record that sometimes breaks from his party.", "window_start": "2025-01-01", "window_end": "2026-05-01", "evidence_summary": "According to the OC Register, Correa's public engagement in 2025 consisted of 16 'Know Your Rights' immigration events (in person), 4 virtual events with the Anaheim Union High School District, and 3 'community conversations' covering Medicaid cuts and veterans' challenges. While Correa was highly active on immigration and constituent services — hosting more in-person events than many OC colleagues — none of these were open-format town halls where any constituent could ask any question. His press release page shows numerous legislative statements, including opposition to FISA reauthorization (April 2026) and reintroduction of the Honor Our Commitment Act (April 2026), proving he was communicatively active through controlled formats.", "primary_url": "https://www.ocregister.com/2025/03/23/how-many-district-events-have-oc-lawmakers-participated-in-this-year/" }, { "topic": "Correa missed the June 12, 2025 vote on H.R. 4 (Rescissions Act) — one of only four Democrats to miss the narrow vote cutting NPR, PBS, and USAID funding", "expected_position": "As a Democrat in a D+27 district, Correa would be expected to vote against legislation gutting public broadcasting and foreign assistance — especially when his AFL-CIO scorecard called it a key vote and the bill passed by just 2 votes (214-212).", "window_start": "2025-06-12", "window_end": "2025-06-12", "evidence_summary": "Correa was one of four Democratic representatives who did not participate in the narrow vote on the Rescissions Act of 2025, along with Joyce Beatty (medical procedure), Donald Norcross, and Emily Randall. The bill passed 214-212, meaning Correa's absence was potentially decisive. Correa was active on adjacent days: he voted against the OBBBA (H.R. 1) on May 22 and July 3, and his press releases show he was engaged on other legislation. No public explanation for his absence on this specific vote was identified.", "primary_url": "https://www.aol.co.uk/news/rep-joyce-beatty-missed-narrow-vote-on-pbs-npr-funding-due-to-medical-procedure" } ], "contradictions": { "claims": [ { "claim_text": "Correa stated he wants the federal government to tackle climate change and that he does not like 'giving Trump a win.' He noted he drives a hybrid car. He voted for the PRO Act, H.R. 2550, and has a 91% AFL-CIO lifetime score.", "claim_date": "2025-05-06", "claim_type": "statement", "source_url": "https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/06/climate/democrats-california-ban-electric-vehicles.html" }, { "claim_text": "Correa voted Yea on H.J.Res. 88 (Roll Call 114, May 1, 2025) to repeal California's EPA waiver for its Advanced Clean Cars II rule — the state's landmark mandate to phase out gas-only vehicle sales by 2035. He was the only Orange County Democrat and one of only two California Democrats to vote with Republicans.", "claim_date": "2025-05-01", "claim_type": "vote", "source_url": "https://clerk.house.gov/Votes/2025114" }, { "claim_text": "Correa voted Yea on H.R. 7888 (Reforming Intelligence and Securing America Act) on April 12, 2024, reauthorizing FISA Section 702 warrantless surveillance powers. The bill passed 273-147.", "claim_date": "2024-04-12", "claim_type": "vote", "source_url": "https://justfacts.votesmart.org/bill/36970/99226/9732/reforming-intelligence-and-securing-america-act" }, { "claim_text": "Correa issued a press release on April 30, 2026 opposing FISA reauthorization, citing 'civil liberties concerns' and stating the bill 'falls short' of protecting Americans' sensitive communications. He called it a 'blank check' for government surveillance.", "claim_date": "2026-04-30", "claim_type": "statement", "source_url": "https://www.quiverquant.com/news/Press+Release:+Correa+Voices+Opposition+to+FISA+Reauthorization+Citing+Civil+Liberties+Concerns" }, { "claim_text": "Correa voted for the PRO Act (H.R. 842, 2021) and H.R. 2550 (Protecting America's Workforce Act, 2025) restoring collective bargaining rights. The AFL-CIO gives him a 91% lifetime score and CWA endorsed him.", "claim_date": "2025-12-11", "claim_type": "vote", "source_url": "https://aflcio.org/scorecard/legislators/j-correa?page=0&order=title&sort=asc" }, { "claim_text": "Correa voted Yea on H.R. 3633 (Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025) and the GENIUS Act, earning a 'Strongly supports crypto' rating from Stand With Crypto. The AFL-CIO scored this as voting 'against working people,' warning the bill 'would enable the crypto industry to operate without effective oversight and endanger hard-earned retirement benefits.'", "claim_date": "2025-07-17", "claim_type": "vote", "source_url": "https://www.standwithcrypto.org/legislator/lou-correa/" } ], "contradictions": [ { "claim_a_idx": 0, "claim_b_idx": 1, "type": "reversal", "severity": "high", "narrative": "Correa publicly states he wants the federal government to tackle climate change and drives a hybrid car, yet voted to repeal California's landmark EV mandate — the state's primary climate policy for transportation. As the only Orange County Democrat to side with Republicans on H.J.Res. 88, he said he was 'listening to working class constituents' who can't afford EVs. Governor Newsom said Republicans were 'hellbent on Making California Smoggy Again.' Correa's rationale pits his climate rhetoric against his blue-collar district's economic concerns — but he gave Trump a major policy win on the same issue he claims to prioritize." }, { "claim_a_idx": 2, "claim_b_idx": 3, "type": "reversal", "severity": "medium", "narrative": "Correa voted to reauthorize FISA Section 702 warrantless surveillance in April 2024, then opposed FISA reauthorization in April 2026 citing civil liberties concerns. Both votes addressed the same statutory framework (FISA Title VII/Section 702 reauthorization). The change in presidential administration (Biden to Trump) is the apparent pivot point — Correa's 2026 statement warned against 'handing Trump's government a blank check' for surveillance." }, { "claim_a_idx": 4, "claim_b_idx": 5, "type": "position_evolution", "severity": "medium", "narrative": "Correa has a 91% AFL-CIO lifetime score and voted for the PRO Act and collective bargaining restoration, yet broke with labor on crypto regulation — voting for H.R. 3633 which the AFL-CIO warned 'would endanger hard-earned retirement benefits.' Stand With Crypto rates him as 'Strongly supports crypto.' This represents a tension between Correa's generally pro-labor voting record and his embrace of the crypto industry's deregulatory agenda." } ] }, "telling_votes": [ { "bill_id": "H.R. 1", "title": "One Big Beautiful Bill Act (budget reconciliation — Medicaid/SNAP cuts, tax reform)", "vote": "nay", "vote_date": "2025-07-03", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/1", "why_it_matters": "Correa voted nay, calling it the 'One Big, Ugly Bill' and citing over $1 trillion in cuts to Medicaid, Medicare, ACA, and food assistance. He warned 2.3 million Californians would lose health coverage and thousands of Orange County seniors rely on SNAP. His district has 9.8% poverty and only 42.1% homeownership. The AFL-CIO scored this as voting with working people. This was constituent_aligned: protecting healthcare and food assistance for a working-class, majority-Hispanic district with below-average homeownership and above-average rent burden.", "category": "constituent_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.J.Res. 88", "title": "Congressional disapproval of EPA waiver for California's Advanced Clean Cars II rule (EV mandate repeal)", "vote": "yea", "vote_date": "2025-05-01", "roll_call_url": "https://clerk.house.gov/Votes/2025114", "why_it_matters": "Correa was the only Orange County Democrat and one of only two California Democrats (alongside George Whitesides) to vote with Republicans to repeal California's EV mandate. He cited working-class constituents who can't afford EVs: 'I'm listening to my constituents who are saying don't kill us.' Yet he also told the New York Times he wants the government to tackle climate change and doesn't like 'giving Trump a win.' The vote is cross_pressure: his district's 65.6% Hispanic, working-class population faces high gas prices and EV affordability challenges, while California Democrats and environmental groups view the mandate as essential climate policy. Oil industry lobbying was cited by some Democrats as influencing the vote.", "category": "cross_pressure" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 29", "title": "Laken Riley Act (mandatory immigration detention for theft-related arrests without conviction)", "vote": "nay", "vote_date": "2025-01-07", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/29", "why_it_matters": "Correa voted nay, firmly opposing 'jailing undocumented individuals for minor offenses before any conviction.' His district is 65.6% Hispanic with 68.6% speaking a non-English language at home — one of the most immigrant-dense districts in the country. 46 Democrats defected to support the bill; Correa held the line. His vote is constituent_aligned: protecting immigrant communities in Santa Ana and Anaheim from mandatory pre-conviction detention.", "category": "constituent_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 8034", "title": "Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024 ($26.38B military aid to Israel)", "vote": "yea", "vote_date": "2024-04-20", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/8034", "why_it_matters": "Correa voted yea as part of the 366-58 bipartisan majority. AIPAC routed $16,294 via 25 payments to his campaign — his third-largest payor. Correa had previously called for only a 'temporary ceasefire' and emphasized hostage release rather than conditioning aid. 37 Democrats opposed; Correa was among the 173 who supported. While the comprehensive package included $9B in humanitarian aid for Gaza, his consistent support for Israel aid across multiple bills (H.R. 6126, H.R. 7217, H.R. 8034) aligns with his top foreign-policy donor's legislative priority.", "category": "donor_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 8035", "title": "Ukraine Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024 ($60.8B military and economic aid)", "vote": "yea", "vote_date": "2024-04-20", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/8035", "why_it_matters": "Correa voted yea with all 210 Democrats (311-112 final). The vote reflected Democratic foreign policy consensus. No donor tension — the vote is constituent_aligned with his district's support for NATO and democratic allies. The primary newsworthiness is the contrast with his Israel votes: Correa votes with his party on Ukraine but demonstrates donor-aligned consistency on Israel across multiple bills.", "category": "constituent_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 22", "title": "Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act (documentary proof of citizenship to register to vote)", "vote": "nay", "vote_date": "2025-04-10", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/22", "why_it_matters": "Correa voted nay, calling it 'GOP-led voter suppression legislation.' The AFL-CIO opposed this bill as creating 'duplicative and burdensome barriers for Americans to access their constitutional right to vote.' His district has only 22.6% bachelor's degree attainment and 27.7% lack a high school diploma — meaning documentation barriers would disproportionately impact his constituents. The vote is constituent_aligned for a working-class, majority-Hispanic district.", "category": "constituent_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 2550", "title": "Protecting America's Workforce Act (restoring collective bargaining rights for over one million federal workers)", "vote": "yea", "vote_date": "2025-12-11", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/2550", "why_it_matters": "Correa voted yea with 231 members (211 Democrats + 20 Republicans). The AFL-CIO supported this bill. Correa's 91% lifetime AFL-CIO score reflects his generally pro-labor record in a working-class district. The vote is constituent_aligned — though his simultaneous support for crypto deregulation (H.R. 3633, opposed by labor) shows the limits of this alignment.", "category": "constituent_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.R. 6126", "title": "Israel Security Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2024 ($14.5B emergency military aid after October 7)", "vote": "yea", "vote_date": "2023-11-02", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/118th-congress/house-bill/6126", "why_it_matters": "Correa voted yea (226-196) on emergency Israel aid one month after the Hamas attacks. Only 12 Democrats supported the bill; Correa was among the small minority crossing party lines. The bill was packaged with IRS cuts. AIPAC is his #3 payor ($16,294). This vote — combined with his support for H.R. 8034 and H.R. 7217 — establishes a consistent donor_aligned pattern on Israel security funding, placing him at odds with the majority of his party on standalone Israel aid vehicles.", "category": "donor_aligned" }, { "bill_id": "H.Con.Res.14", "title": "House Fiscal Year 2025 Budget Resolution ($4.5 trillion in tax cuts, $1.5 trillion in program cuts)", "vote": "nay", "vote_date": "2025-04-10", "roll_call_url": "https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-concurrent-resolution/14", "why_it_matters": "Correa voted nay. The AFL-CIO opposed this budget as cutting 'funding for critical services that hardworking taxpayers depend upon.' Correa's vote aligned with his district's working-class interests and his 92% AFL-CIO score. The vote was constituent_aligned.", "category": "constituent_aligned" } ], "constituency_baseline": { "baseline": { "district_summary": "California's 46th Congressional District encompasses central Orange County including most of Santa Ana, Anaheim, and portions of Orange and Fullerton. With approximately 757,342 constituents, it is a majority-minority district: 65.6% Hispanic, 24.8% White, 15.8% Asian. The median age is 35.1 (significantly younger than the 38.5 national average), with 32% of residents in the 20-39 working-age bracket. Median household income is $89,883 — well above the national median but below surrounding OC districts — with a 9.8% poverty rate. Homeownership is only 42.1%, far below the 65.5% national average, with median rent at $2,122 and median home value at $748,300. Only 22.6% hold a bachelor's degree, and 27.7% lack a high school diploma. 68.6% speak a non-English language at home. The economy is anchored by healthcare, hospitality (Disneyland Resort), retail, and small businesses. The district is car-dependent (70.3% drive alone, 2.3% public transit). Cook PVI rates the district D+27 (Solid Seat). Correa has held this seat since 2017, winning re-election in 2024 with 63.4%. Key issues include immigration policy, healthcare access, education access, and rent burden.", "top_employers": [ { "name": "Disneyland Resort", "employees": 32000, "source_url": "https://www.opensecrets.org/campaign-expenditures/vendor?year=2024&vendor=Disneyland%20Resort" }, { "name": "Santa Ana Unified School District", "employees": 5500, "source_url": "https://www.sausd.us/" }, { "name": "Anaheim Union High School District", "employees": 3500, "source_url": "https://www.ocregister.com/2025/03/23/how-many-district-events-have-oc-lawmakers-participated-in-this-year/" }, { "name": "Kaiser Permanente Orange County", "employees": 7000, "source_url": "https://www.datausa.io/profile/geo/congressional-district-46-ca" }, { "name": "City of Santa Ana", "employees": 1800, "source_url": "https://www.datausa.io/profile/geo/congressional-district-46-ca" } ], "dominant_industries": [ { "naics": "62", "share": 0.18, "source_url": "https://www.datausa.io/profile/geo/congressional-district-46-ca" }, { "naics": "72", "share": 0.14, "source_url": "https://www.datausa.io/profile/geo/congressional-district-46-ca" }, { "naics": "44-45", "share": 0.12, "source_url": "https://www.datausa.io/profile/geo/congressional-district-46-ca" }, { "naics": "31-33", "share": 0.10, "source_url": "https://www.datausa.io/profile/geo/congressional-district-46-ca" } ], "recent_ballot_measures": [ { "name": "California Proposition 1 (2024): Behavioral Health Services Program and Bond Measure", "year": 2024, "result": "passed", "margin": "50.2% Yes to 49.8% No statewide — extremely narrow margin", "source_url": "https://ballotpedia.org/California_2024_ballot_propositions" }, { "name": "California Proposition 3 (2024): Right to Marriage — repealed Proposition 8", "year": 2024, "result": "passed", "margin": "62% Yes to 38% No statewide", "source_url": "https://ballotpedia.org/California_2024_ballot_propositions" }, { "name": "California Proposition 32 (2024): $18 Minimum Wage Initiative", "year": 2024, "result": "failed", "margin": "50.8% No to 49.2% Yes — extremely narrow defeat", "source_url": "https://ballotpedia.org/California_2024_ballot_propositions" } ], "demographic_anchors": [ { "label": "Median household income", "value": "$89,883 (national: $37,585) — well above national median but below OC average", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/j-correa-C001110/district" }, { "label": "Population (2024 estimate)", "value": "757,342", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/j-correa-C001110/district" }, { "label": "Hispanic/Latino population share", "value": "65.6% — majority-minority district; largest demographic group", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/j-correa-C001110/district" }, { "label": "Homeownership rate", "value": "42.1% (national: 65.5%) — severely below average; median home value $748,300", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/j-correa-C001110/district" }, { "label": "Median rent", "value": "$2,122/month (national: $1,163) — among the highest rent burdens nationally", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/j-correa-C001110/district" }, { "label": "Non-English language at home", "value": "68.6% — among the highest of any congressional district nationally", "source_url": "https://datausa.io/profile/geo/congressional-district-46-ca" }, { "label": "Bachelor's degree or higher", "value": "22.6% (national: 33.7%) — significantly below average; 27.7% lack a high school diploma", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/j-correa-C001110/district" }, { "label": "Poverty rate", "value": "9.8% (national: 12.4%)", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/j-correa-C001110/district" }, { "label": "Unemployment rate", "value": "5.5% (national: 3.5%) — elevated", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/j-correa-C001110/district" }, { "label": "Cook Partisan Voting Index (2026 rating)", "value": "D+27 — Solid Seat; D shift +3 from prior cycle", "source_url": "https://legisletter.org/legislator/j-correa-C001110/district" } ] } } }