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Seth Magaziner

 
Seth Magaziner Image
Title
Representative
Rhode Island's 2nd District
Party Affiliation
Democrat
2025
2026
Donate Against (Primary Election)
Donate Against (General Election)
Top Contributors
(2022 - current)
Top Industries
(2022 - current)
506,166
Retired
Retired
$506,166
Lawyers/Law Firms
$306,790
Real Estate
$182,655
Leadership PACs
$158,800
Securities & Investment
$151,150
VoteDown vs Influence Donors
Data supplied by OpenSecrets.org
Representative Offices
Address
935 Jefferson Blvd.
Suite
Suite 3003
City/State/Zip
Warwick RI, 02886
Phone
401-244-1201
News
04/21/2025 --bostonherald
The newly disclosed chat group the U.S. Defense chief allegedly created and titled "Defense | Team Huddle" apparently included his wife, fellow Fox alum Jennifer Rauchet, his brother Phil Hegseth, and his personal lawyer Tim Parlatore, among others.
04/21/2025 --dailykos
On Tuesday, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren did something that would have been politically unthinkable for Democrats even a year before: She published a heavily-promoted op-ed on the Fox News site. Yeah, that Fox News.Unlike in years past, Warren’s foray into hostile territory wasn’t met with scolding that she was legitimizing President Donald Trump’s leading propaganda outlet. Instead, her searing defense of Social Security is the first big step in Democrats’ efforts to protect America’s social safety net by taking the fight directly to conservative media outlets—and it could prove pivotal in the budget battle to come.Warren’s op-ed is just the beginning of a media blitz that Democrats hope will pin Republicans down on their broken pledges to protect Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. From Capitol Hill to constituent town halls, Democratic lawmakers are finally honing in on a message that works. Now they need to sell it. They’re getting plenty of help from two unlikely sources: Trump himself and his billionaire henchman Elon Musk, who have managed to bring the Social Security Administration to the brink of collapse thanks to a more than 50% cut in the agency’s technology division. Last month, Daily Kos reported that the SSA website crashed four times in 10 days, causing major headaches for seniors. Problems are even worse in April, with The Washington Post reporting that the website now crashes nearly three times per week, often for up to a full day at a time.“Donald Trump has set this billionaire loose in the federal government, firing people and cutting programs left and right, just to pay for more tax cuts for people at the very top who don’t need it,” Rhode Island Rep. Seth Magaziner said at a press conference on Tuesday. “It is unconscionable.” It’s also the GOP’s biggest political liability.Now Republicans are going a step further, proposing cuts to both Social Security and Medicaid as a way to fund Trump’s debt-exploding tax cuts for billionaires and corporations. Trump and his GOP allies may think they can fool the American people, but things aren’t quite shaking out as they’d hoped. Republican lawmakers now find their constituent town halls packed with furious voters who feel betrayed by Trump’s bogus populism. In response, Republicans chose to ... cancel all of their constituent meetings. Amazing.Related | Democrats hear out pissed-off voters while Republicans ghost themAll that chaos has opened up a major opportunity for Democrats, who seem surprised to learn that nearly 80% of Americans and over two-thirds of Republican voters strongly oppose any cuts to Social Security, Medicare, or Medicaid. Senate Democrats put that knowledge into action this week with their first ad campaign of the 2026 election cycle, tying Sens. Thom Tillis and Susan Collins to the increasing chaos at SSA. “In 2026, voters will hold Susan Collins, Thom Tillis, and Senate Republicans accountable for their toxic plan to slash Social Security in order to pay for a tax giveaway to billionaires," Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Communications Director Maeve Coyle said. Team Tillis is taking the threat seriously, with the senator recently promising to protect North Carolinians’ critical social services from dangerous cuts. He has reason to be nervous: In 2020, Tillis beat Democrat Cal Cunningham by just 95,000 votes. That’s a drop in the bucket compared to North Carolinas’ nearly 2.3 million Social Security beneficiaries, many of whom Tillis infuriated by refusing to attend a town hall event last month in Raleigh. Hundreds more protested against Social Security cuts outside Tillis’ Greensboro office. It was hardly the warm reception the two-term senator expected.Democrats are also prepared to offer the American people some media spectacle after years of dry, policy-focused discussion. House Democrats on Thursday demanded a formal investigation into Musk’s Social Security meddling, citing new whistleblower allegations that Musk’s incompetence is putting beneficiaries’ sensitive personal data at risk. That came a day after leading Democrats visited SSA headquarters for a “day of action” that generated a flood of positive media coverage. After months of messaging stumbles, Democrats have finally remembered how to control the news cycle.The party’s all-in approach on Social Security isn’t just generating major headlines—it’s reshaping how the American public thinks about both parties. Navigator Research found that most Americans now trust Democrats to protect social services like Social Security and Medicaid. Meanwhile, more Americans than ever rank protecting Social Security as among their top political issues. If Democrats can keep voters focused on Social Security as the litmus test for 2026, Republicans will soon find themselves sailing into a perfect storm of political fury.As Democrats reach deeper into the GOP’s political base, Republicans have been left scrambling to avoid any discussion of Social Security. Unfortunately for them, a looming budget battle makes that impossible—especially when the future of Trump’s tax cuts depends on slashing social programs like Medicaid.The House’s prolonged budget process ensures Republicans will be tied to their proposed Social Security cuts through much of the summer, offering Democrats plenty of time to hammer their message home to weary voters. House Democratic leaders are convinced Social Security will be the issue that returns them to power in 2026. For now, Republicans seem to believe them.Thank you to the Daily Kos community who continues to fight so hard with Daily Kos. Your reader support means everything. We will continue to have you covered and keep you informed, so please donate just $3 to help support the work we do.
03/24/2025 --rollcall
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth greets Rep. Tim Burchett, R-Tenn., before President Donald Trump’s address to Congress on March 4.
03/15/2025 --theepochtimes
The measures would dedicate personnel, training, and resources to monitor transnational repression from authoritarian regimes and protect target groups.
02/05/2025 --theepochtimes
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and others rallied with lawmakers as speakers floated strategies to stop Trump.
01/19/2025 --columbian
WASHINGTON — Zach Nunn’s military background tells him that success in any given mission requires an understanding of the battle-space — and in the fight to ban congressional stock trading, it will always “be stacked against” those urging change, the Iowa Republican and Air Force Reserve colonel said.
01/15/2025 --rollcall
Some members of Congress are looking to Donald Trump to boost their hopes for a congressional stock trading ban.
11/29/2024 --foxnews
Connecticut's entire congressional delegation was targeted by violent threats, leading House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., to speak out, following Trump nominees facing threats earlier this week.
11/29/2024 --axios
House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) on Friday called for "maximum protection" for members of Congress and their families in response to a series of bomb threats around Thanksgiving.Why it matters: Nearly the entire Connecticut congressional delegation faced bomb threats on Thursday following a spate of similar threats targeting Trump administration appointees.Rep. Seth Magaziner (D-R.I.) said Friday that he had been "recently notified" of a bomb threat targeting him and his family at their home but that there was "no evidence of a bomb on the property."None of the threats turned out to be credible, according to statements from the lawmakers and appointees, law enforcement and the Trump transition team.But the incidents still have lawmakers and staffers on edge amid a broad rise in threats against members of Congress in recent years.What he's saying: "We have been in close communication with the Sergeant at Arms office and it is imperative that Congress provide maximum protection for all Members and their families moving forward," Jeffries said in a statement.The Democratic leader said the threats are "unacceptable, unconscionable and have no place in a civilized society," and that House Democrats "will not be deterred or intimidated from serving the people by violent threats.""All perpetrators of political violence directed at any party must be prosecuted to the full extent of the law," he added.State of play: Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) and Reps. Jim Himes (D-Conn.), Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), John Larson (D-Conn.), Joe Courtney (D-Conn.) and Jahana Hayes (D-Conn.) were all targeted Thursday.According to Jeffries, the incidents "ranged from detailed threats of a pipe bomb placed in mailboxes to swatting," and all were "signed with 'MAGA' at the conclusion of the message."The Capitol Police declined to offer details about the threats in order to "minimize the risk of copy-cats."The other side: Rep. Bryan Steil (R-Wis.), the chair of the House Administration Committee, said in a statement to Axios that there "is no place for threats or political violence in our democracy.""I'm in constant communication with our law enforcement officials to ensure they have the resources they need to keep Members and their families safe," he added.A spokesperson for House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Zoom out: Several Trump appointees, including Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) and former Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-N.Y.), were targeted by bomb and "swatting" threats Wednesday.The incidents come against the backdrop of a years-long rise in political violence targeting lawmakers and public figures in both parties, including two assassination attempts against Trump.House Democrats launched a task force on member safety last December after a series of raucous protests around the Israel-Hamas war.
11/05/2024 --abcnews
Democrats are heavily favored to win both U.S. House seats in Rhode Island
10/20/2024 --tulsaworld
The two people who want to be Tulsa's next mayor and those running for the last open City Council seats will come together Tuesday to meet voters and answer questions.
09/29/2024 --canoncitydailyrecord
Former DaVita CEO Kent Thiry is one of driving forces behind Colorado Proposition 131: a ballot measure install a ranked-choice voting system and open primaries.
09/06/2024 --rollcall
Sarah McBride, a Democrat running for Delaware’s congressional seat, speaks at the Wilmington Democratic Committee annual fish fry in Wilmington, Del., on July 27. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call)
09/06/2024 --bgdailynews
More than five months after weighing in on the presidential matchup, Rhode Island voters will choose which candidates will face off in this fall’s U.S. Senate election. Democratic Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse faces a primary challenge from Mike Costa, a former...
 
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