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Mike Collins

 
Mike Collins Image
Title
Representative
Georgia's 10th District
Party Affiliation
Republican
2025
2026
Social Media Accounts
Twitter
: @
RepMikeCollins
Donate Against (Primary Election)
Donate Against (General Election)
Top Contributors
(2022 - current)
Top Industries
(2022 - current)
71,171
Retired
Retired
$71,171
Real Estate
$40,550
Credit Unions
$32,500
Leadership PACs
$32,500
Trucking
$31,660
VoteDown vs Influence Donors
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Representative Offices
Address
100 Court St.
City/State/Zip
Monroe GA, 30655
Phone
770-207-1776
News
03/21/2025 --gazettetimes
Trump's administration pulled $400 million in grants and funding over the university's handling of protests against Israel's war in Gaza.
03/18/2025 --gazette
Workers' rights, defending immigrant communities, and protecting Colorado's environment are among the top priorities for the state's Latino Democratic Caucus as the 2025 session hits the midway point. The Latino Democratic Caucus unveiled these priorities, including the protection of illegal...
03/18/2025 --rollcall
Democrat Kristen McDonald Rivet is the latest House member to receive Senate buzz in Michigan. (Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call file photo)
03/14/2025 --huffpost
The legislation would undo a billion-dollar cut to the D.C. government's budget, but it still needs to be approved by the House.
03/13/2025 --washingtontimes
After spearheading a series of conservative victories as the top dog in Georgia, Gov. Brian Kemp faces intense pressure from Washington Republicans to get into the 2026 race for U.S. Senate.
03/13/2025 --foxnews
Former Transportation Secretary and presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg is expected to rule out a run for the Senate in Michigan in 2026, clearing a path for a potential 2028 White House bid.
03/13/2025 --foxnews
The GOP has identified Georgia’s U.S. Senate race in 2026 as a chance to widen its margin over Democrats in the U.S. Senate after Democrat Jeanne Shaheen announced she won't run.
03/10/2025 --fox5sandiego
Republican lawmakers are growing alarmed over signs that President Trump’s expanding trade war is hurting the economy, something they’re hearing from constituents at home who are struggling to adapt to Trump’s zigzagging tariff pronouncements.
03/10/2025 --foxnews
House Speaker Mike Johnson will hold a vote on the continuing resolution (CR) Tuesday ahead of Friday's deadline to avoid a partial government shutdown.
03/09/2025 --columbian
WASHINGTON — House Republicans unveiled a spending bill Saturday that would keep federal agencies funded through Sept. 30, pushing ahead with a go-it-alone strategy that seems certain to spark a major confrontation with Democrats over the contours of government spending.
03/06/2025 --kron4
The House on Thursday voted to censure Rep. Al Green (D-Texas) for his protest during President Trump’s address to Congress this week — a disruptive display that prompted his removal from the House chamber. The House adopted the measure in a largely party-line 224-198-2 vote, making Green the 28th member of the House to receive [...]
03/05/2025 --gazette
A day after President Donald Trump gave his the first formal address to Congress of his second term, Colorado Springs U.S. Rep. Jeff Crank backed and defended Trump's policy decisions during an inaugural virtual town hall meeting.
03/05/2025 --kron4
House Republicans are pressing on with plans for a clean six-month stopgap to keep the government funded beyond next week’s shutdown deadline in the face of staunch resistance from Democrats. House Appropriations Committee Chair Tom Cole (R-Okla.) told reporters on Wednesday that Republicans are “running the full-year CR, period,” next week, referring to the party’s [...]
02/22/2025 --dailykos
If you thought this would be the week Republicans grew a spine and stood up to President Donald Trump’s lawlessness, embrace of murderous dictators over American allies, infliction of suffering through thoughtless cuts to the federal workforce, and even declaration that he is a “king,” well ... you’d be wrong.Republicans have overwhelmingly held their tongues, refusing to criticize Trump for his destructive behavior and acting as if they are powerless to stop his rampage through the federal government.Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, who once slammed former President Barack Obama as a “king,” had no complaint when Trump declared himself one on Tuesday.In fact, Paul wrote a post on X that same day, describing how awesome he thought Trump’s first month in office has been:A few people may have noticed that I resisted an enthusiastic endorsement of Donald Trump during the election. But now, I’m amazed by the Trump cabinet (many of whom I would have picked). I love his message to the Ukrainian warmongers, and along with his DOGE initiative shows I was wrong to withhold my endorsement. So today, admittedly a little tardy, I give Donald Trump my enthusiastic endorsement! (Too little too late some will say, but, you know, it is sincere, there is that.) Don’t expect this endorsement to be fawning. I still think tariffs are a terrible idea, but Dios Mio, what courage, what tenacity. Go @realDonaldTrump Go!Other Republicans were silent about Trump’s king declaration, which would have been the lead story for days on right-wing cable if a Democratic president had said the same thing.As for the Trump and co-President Elon Musk’s sloppy effort to gut the federal workforce—which accidentally led to the ouster of essential workers who are maintaining the country’s nuclear arsenal, trying to stop the bird flu from becoming the next pandemic, and managing a fund that pays for treatment for 9/11 survivors and first responders—Republicans threw up their arms and said there’s nothing they can do.“Congress can’t do anything except complain about it,” Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa told reporters in Iowa, according to Radio Free Iowa, “but I think we have to have sympathy andRepublican Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, left, stands with Kash Patel, the newly minted FBI director, in the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 30, 2025.understanding for people that are laid off.”In fact, most Republicans said they are fine with slashing the federal workforce, and have had only tepid criticism of the Trump administration’s poor execution of those cuts. “I think we all know that the administration—the new administration—is giving a very careful scrub to the government, to all the agencies of the government, to figure out how we can do things more efficiently and save money for the American taxpayer,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune said at a news conference. “It’s important, in doing that, that you don’t undermine important services. In many cases, as you point out, there are some that affect my state. There are some that affect all of my colleagues’ states around the country, and we will work with the administration as they move forward to ensure that important services that have to do with health and safety, for example, are protected and preserved.”Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine said Trump and Musk, who is helping push the cuts to the federal workforce, need to slow down because “they're making mistakes.”“This latest example of individuals who were studying bird flu being fired from the Department of Agriculture is a perfect example. Another is that they mistakenly put in charge of the FBI, a person that they didn't intend to be in charge temporarily of the FBI, that's what happens when you move too fast and you don't take the time to do a careful evaluation,” Collins told HuffPost’s Igor Bobic.Sen. Lisa Murkowski, Republican of Alaska, said Trump and Musk have their hearts in the right place but that their execution has been off. Republican Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, left, and Susan Collins of Maine talk in the U.S. Capitol on June 23, 2022.“I share the administration’s goal of reducing the size of the federal government, but this approach is bringing confusion, anxiety, and now trauma to our civil servants—some of whom moved their families and packed up their whole lives to come here,” Murkowski said in a post on X. “Indiscriminate workforce cuts aren’t efficient and won’t fix the federal budget, but they will hurt good people who have answered the call to public service to do important work for our nation.”Republican Rep. Don Bacon of Nebraska, who occupies a district that Democrat Kamala Harris won in the 2024 presidential election, echoed similar sentiments."Before making cuts rashly, the Administration should be studying and staffing to see what the consequences are. Measure twice before cutting. They have had to backtrack multiple times," Bacon said. But the dumbest comment came from Sen. Tommy Tuberville, the Alabama Republican who is excited that Trump and Musk are going to make cuts at the Department of Defense next.“I wouldn't be against them taking it from a Pentagon to a Trigon. Cut a couple sides off of it,” Tuberville said, apparently not aware that a shape with three sides is called a triangle.Republican Sen. Tommy Tuberville of AlabamaMeanwhile, even when Republicans disagreed with what the Trump administration was doing, they refused to say Trump was responsible, speaking in circles to try to avoid angering Dear Leader Don.A number of Republicans criticized Russian dictator Vladimir Putin’s efforts to force an election in Ukraine, but did not criticize Trump for siding with Putin in that effort.“Putin is now asking for a new election in Ukraine, conducted in a specific manner that he can influence, so that he can install his puppet and accomplish that which he couldn’t militarily. Nice try, Vladimir. Try holding a free and fair election in your own country first without imprisoning your opponents. You have zero credibility and the United States and Europe will not cave to your ridiculous demands,” Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick, Republican, of Pennsylvania, said in a post on X, even though Trump is also pushing for Ukraine to hold an election.Republican Rep. Mike Lawler of New York wrote a similarly tough post on X about Putin—but never once said Trump was wrong for embracing him.“Vladimir Putin is a vile dictator and thug, who has worked in a concerted effort with China and Iran to undermine and destabilize the United States, Europe, Israel, and the free world. He is not our friend, nor our ally,” Lawler wrote.Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy speaks to the press near a nuclear power plant in Ukraine on Feb. 13, 2025.Trump aired an opposing sentiment on Wednesday, when he falsely described Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as a dictator. And when Thune was asked if he also views the Zelenskyy that way, Thune responded, “The president speaks for himself.”Murkowski played dumb when asked for her response to Trump’s Zelenskyy comment.“I would like to see that in context, because I would certainly never refer to President Zelenskyy as a dictator,” Murkowski said. And Sen. Roger Wicker, Republican of Mississippi, said he was going to ask the White House for “clarification” about what Trump meant when he called Zelenskyy a dictator—as if Trump’s comment didn’t speak for itself.As Trump once said, he could shoot someone in the middle of Fifth Avenue and not lose any voters. The same, apparently, goes for Republican members of Congress.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.
02/18/2025 --pantagraph
Former Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn is challenging Gov. JB Pritzker, a fellow Democrat, to use his bully pulpit to strengthen Illinois’ weak ethics laws.
02/14/2025 --whig
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says he will only agree to meet in person with Russian leader Vladimir Putin after a common plan is negotiated with U.S. President Donald Trump. Zelenskyy also said he believes Trump is the key to ending...
02/14/2025 --concordmonitor
A top non-partisan political handicapper predicts that New Hampshire’s U.S. Senate race in 2026 is already shaping up to be a very competitive contest.
02/11/2025 --foxnews
Democrats face “few opportunities" to win back the Senate majority from the Republicans in the 2026 midterm elections, a top non-partisan political handicapper predicts.
02/11/2025 --timesofsandiego
Congressman Darrell Issa (CA-48), Chairman of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, Artificial Intelligence and the Internet, Congressman Scott Fitzgerald (WI-05), and Congressman Mike Collins (GA-10) introduced HR 1109 – The Litigation Transparency Act of 2025.
02/11/2025 --forbes
Patel is a controversial nominee, having long raged against the so-called Deep State and prioritized his loyalty to Trump.
02/11/2025 --theepochtimes
Last week, the Senate Finance Committee voted along party lines to advance Kennedy to a full Senate floor vote, which could happen this week.
02/11/2025 --dailycaller
'Accident Waiting To Happen': Feds Ignored DC Death Trap For Years Despite Dozens Of Near Misses With Planes, Choppers
02/10/2025 --rollcall
Louisiana Sen. Bill Cassidy is pictured during a Feb. 4 committee vote on Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s nomination to be HHS secretary.
02/10/2025 --fox5sandiego
GOP senators are "terrified" over the prospect of facing primary challengers funded by Elon Musk if they stick their necks out by opposing President Donald Trump's agenda.
02/07/2025 --foxnews
Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, a top Trump ally in the House and one of the best known members of Congress, keeps the door wide open to possible runs for Senate or governor in 2026.
02/07/2025 --gazette
A bill that would authorize the Attorney General to investigate price gouging on essential items cleared its first hurdle on Thursday, but some have raised concerns about its vague definition of what qualifies as a necessity.
02/06/2025 --forbes
Patel is a controversial nominee, having long raged against the so-called Deep State and prioritized his loyalty to Trump.
02/06/2025 --forbes
Patel is a controversial nominee, having long raged against the so-called Deep State and prioritized his loyalty to Trump.
02/06/2025 --benzinga
Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, chair of the Senate Appropriations Committee is among the first Republican lawmakers to openly express concerns over the growing influence of billionaire Elon Musk within the Trump administration and across federal agencies."There's no doubt that the president appears to have empowered Elon Musk far beyond what I think is appropriate," she told reporters Wednesday. "I think a lot of it is going to end up in court," she said, according to The Hill.She's got that right. Democrats on the House Oversight Committee tried and failed to subpoena Musk on Wednesday in a surprise attempt to get him to testify about his efforts to reshape the federal government. Musk was appointed by President Donald Trump to head the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, though ...Full story available on Benzinga.com
02/06/2025 --huffpost
The House member's dig at fellow Republican Mace got personal.
01/30/2025 --forbes
Patel is a controversial nominee, having long raged against the so-called Deep State and prioritized his loyalty to Trump.
01/30/2025 --foxnews
Former Rep. Mike Rogers of Michigan says he's considering a second straight Republican run for U.S. Senate days after Democratic Sen. Gary Peters announced he wouldn't seek re-election in the 2026 midterms
01/30/2025 --forbes
Patel is a controversial nominee, having long raged against the so-called Deep State and prioritized his loyalty to Trump.
01/30/2025 --forbes
Patel is a controversial nominee, having long raged against the so-called Deep State and prioritized his loyalty to Trump.
01/30/2025 --forbes
Patel is slated to join Trump’s administration after years of building a personal brand off the president.
01/30/2025 --forbes
Patel is a controversial nominee, having long raged against the so-called Deep State and prioritized his loyalty to Trump.
01/30/2025 --kron4
The White House budget office rescinded a memo ordering a broad freeze on federal grants and loans after Republican senators “hit the ceiling” over the order, which caught them completely by surprise and created confusion in their home states. Republican senators were careful not to criticize President Trump publicly after the Office of Management and [...]
01/26/2025 --forbes
The Senate is set to publicly question Gabbard in a hearing on Jan. 30.
01/25/2025 --benzinga
President Donald Trump launched Solana (CRYPTO: SOL) based meme coin TRUMP (CRYPTO: TRUMP) shortly before his inauguration on Jan. 20.A new Benzinga poll predicts which notable figure will be the first to publicly disclose they bought some Trump coin.What Happened: The surprise launch of the Trump coin took the cryptocurrency and investing worlds by storm as social media users questioned the legitimacy of posts from Trump's accounts.Posts made on X and Truth Social announced the official launch of the Trump coin, with some users believing the incoming president of the United States had been hacked.Instead, the launch was done before Trump officially became president and he has confirmed his involvement while remaining mostly silent since taking office as president.A large portion of the coin's supply is controlled by Trump-affiliated companies, but retail investors also bought up supply of the coin.Benzinga recently asked which famous person connected with Trump will be the first to disclose that they own a Trump coin."Who do you think is most likely to buy the Trump meme coin?" Benzinga asked.The results were:Elon Musk: 61%Marjorie Taylor Greene: 20%Joe Rogan: 9%Tucker Carlson: 7%Ron DeSantis: 3%The poll found an overwhelming majority select Musk as the most likely purchaser. Musk is one of Trump's closest allies in recent months, and ...Full story available on Benzinga.com
01/25/2025 --clickondetroit
In the early days of President Donald Trump’s second term, Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski had openly challenged or rebuked him at least three times.
01/22/2025 --wvnews
The Right Rev. Mariann Edgar Budde, bishop of the Diocese of Washington, says she will continue to pray for President Donald Trump, hours after he lashed out at her over a sermon. She told The Associated Press that he was...
01/22/2025 --foxnews
We're approaching the first weekend of President Donald Trump's second term – and the Senate is already running behind in confirming his Cabinet nominees.
01/22/2025 --columbian
WASHINGTON — The House on Wednesday gave final approval to a bill that requires the detainment of unauthorized migrants accused of theft and violent crimes, marking the first legislation that President Donald Trump can sign as Congress, with some bipartisan support, swiftly moved in line with his plans to crackdown on illegal immigration.
01/22/2025 --theepochtimes
The bill, which would increase the detentions of foreign national criminals, passed both houses of Congress with bipartisan support.
01/22/2025 --dailycaller
'A reflection of voters rejecting open borders in November'
01/22/2025 --wvnews
The House has passed a bill to require the detainment of unauthorized migrants accused of theft and violent crimes. It marks the first legislation that President Donald Trump can sign as Congress, with some bipartisan support, swiftly moved in line...
 
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