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Moylan, James C.

Moylan, James C.

RepublicanHouse·Guam (At-Large)

Serving since 2011 (112th–119th Congresses)

Contact

Office

228 Cannon House Office Building Washington DC 20515-5301

Campaign Finance (2026)

Raised$91K
Spent$47K
Cash on Hand$48K

Funding Sources

Individual$58K
PAC$32K
Small donors (≤$200)$2K
Large donors$56K

Top Industries

Other$25K

Source: FEC · 2026 cycle

About

James C. Moylan serves as Guam's Delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives, a position he has held since January 2023. As a Delegate, Moylan represents Guam's at-large district, though his voting privileges are limited compared to Representatives from the states. Moylan is a native of Tumon, Guam, and brings substantial public service experience to Congress. Prior to his election, he served in the Guam Legislature from 2019 to 2023 and worked as a commissioned officer in the United States Army and as a parole officer for the Guam Department of Corrections. He holds a bachelor's degree in criminal justice from the University of Guam.

In Congress, Moylan serves on three major committees: the House Committee on Armed Services, the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, and the House Committee on Education and Workforce. Within these committees, he participates in subcommittees focused on military readiness, seapower and projection forces, East Asia and Pacific affairs, and education policy. His committee assignments reflect his focus on issues critical to Guam and the Pacific region, particularly defense and security matters given the strategic importance of the territory.

Moylan has sponsored numerous bills addressing territorial concerns, including the Territorial Student Access to Higher Education Act, the Territorial SBA Loan Guaranty Adjustment Act of 2026, and the Parity for Pacific Radiation Survivors Act. He has also worked on legislation related to Guam's governance and land policy. Additionally, Moylan is a member of the Problem Solvers Caucus, a bipartisan group focused on collaborative solutions to policy challenges. As the first Republican to win Guam's House seat in nearly 30 years, his election marked a significant shift in the territory's congressional representation.

AI-generated biography

Committee Assignments

Legislative Activity

56

Bills Sponsored

10

Recent Votes

Vote history