Jasmine Crockett has been lecturing Americans for months.
She demands wealthy people pay their "fair share" while complaining about expensive security costs.
And Jasmine Crockett just got exposed for one lavish lifestyle that will make your blood boil.
Federal Election Commission filings just revealed the shocking truth about how Crockett has been living on her donors' dime.
The Texas Democrat racked up a staggering $75,000 tab in 2025 alone on luxury hotels, limousines, and personal security across the country.
That's more money than most Americans make in an entire year.
FEC Records Expose Crockett's Luxury Hotel Spending Spree
The numbers are jaw-dropping.
Crockett blew $4,175 at the Ritz-Carlton and another $2,304 at The Luxury Collection.¹
She dropped $5,326 at the West Hollywood Edition in Los Angeles and $1,173 at the Times Square Edition in New York City.²
Vegas got its share too — over $2,000 went to the Cosmopolitan and Aria resorts.³
But Crockett wasn't done burning through campaign cash.
She spent $2,703 at the Edgartown Inn and $3,160 at The Coco, both in Martha's Vineyard.⁴
All told, her campaign spent $25,748.87 since January on high-end hotels and limousine services.⁵
Notice what's missing from that list of luxury destinations?
Dallas. Houston. Anywhere in Texas.
The woman who represents Texas's 30th Congressional District can't be bothered to spend donor money in her own state.
She's too busy living it up in Martha's Vineyard and Manhattan while her constituents deal with crime and economic hardship.
Limousine Services Get the VIP Treatment
The hotel bills were just the beginning of Crockett's spending spree.
Her campaign paid $2,728 to Transportation 4 U, a Chicago-based limousine service that specializes in "top-tier limousine experiences tailored to your needs."⁶
They were so proud of chauffeuring Crockett around that they posted her picture on their Yelp page with the caption: "We were honored to provide transportation services for Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett during her visit to Chicago."⁷
She also spent $2,310 at DCA Car LLC, a premium car and limousine service, and another $1,254 at Bay Area Limousine.⁸
While ordinary Americans are clipping coupons and walking to save gas money, Crockett is cruising around in luxury limos paid for by people who donated to her campaign thinking she'd fight for working families.
The irony is rich.
The Security Spending Hypocrisy Reaches New Heights
Here's where Crockett's hypocrisy gets truly nauseating.
Her campaign dropped nearly $50,000 on security expenses this year alone.⁹
This is the same woman who spent years calling to "defund the police" and claiming law enforcement needs to be drastically reduced.
In 2021, Crockett pontificated that "The Defund movement seeks to actually bring about healing and finally invest in our communities to make them safer."¹⁰
She wanted fewer cops protecting you and your family.
But when it comes to her own personal safety, suddenly she needs $50,000 worth of professional security.
Crockett was caught on video complaining that Congress doesn't provide her with free security.
She actually whined that she has to pay for her own protection while demanding taxpayers foot the bill for her big mouth.
The woman who wants to disarm police and defund law enforcement expects you to pay for armed guards to protect her.
Pattern of Financial Scandals Continues
This luxury spending spree isn't Crockett's first brush with financial controversy.
The FEC opened an investigation into her campaign earlier this year over suspicious ActBlue donations.
A complaint filed by the Coolidge-Reagan Foundation alleged that Crockett's campaign accepted $610 from 56 separate transactions from a 73-year-old retiree who claimed he never made the donations.¹¹
The complaint suggested Crockett's campaign received about $870,000 through ActBlue, raising questions about how many other donations were made without donors' knowledge.¹²
Watchdog groups also filed complaints alleging Crockett failed to disclose stock holdings in at least 25 companies on her congressional financial forms, even though she reported them while serving in the Texas legislature.¹³
Some of these undisclosed investments were in industries that could be affected by legislation she supports, creating potential conflicts of interest.
The Foundation for Accountability and Civic Trust noted that publicly available stock valuations indicated some of these undisclosed assets exceeded the $1,000 reporting requirement.¹⁴
This Is How the Swamp Really Works
Crockett represents everything wrong with Washington.
She lectures Americans about paying their fair share while living like royalty on campaign donations from people who can barely afford rent.
She wants to defund your police protection while spending $50,000 on her own security detail.
She calls for fiscal responsibility while blowing $75,000 in one year on luxury hotels and limousines.
This isn't public service — it's a scam.
Crockett has turned her congressional seat into a personal ATM, using donor money to fund a lifestyle most Americans can only dream about.
The woman who claims to fight for working families spends more on a single hotel stay than many of her constituents make in a month.
She's not representing Texas — she's representing herself to the high life on everyone else's dime.
And the worst part? She'll probably get away with it because that's how the swamp protects its own.
¹ Federal Election Commission filings, "Jasmine for US Campaign Committee," 2025. ² Ibid. ³ Ibid. ⁴ Ibid. ⁵ Fox News Digital, "Far-left firebrand spends eye-popping amount of campaign cash on luxury hotels, 'top-tier' limo services," November 11, 2025. ⁶ Ibid. ⁷ Ibid. ⁸ Ibid. ⁹ Ibid. ¹⁰ Texas House of Representatives, Floor Speech Transcript, 2021. ¹¹ Washington Examiner, "Jasmine Crockett faces FEC complaint over ActBlue donations," April 14, 2025. ¹² Ibid. ¹³ Washington Free Beacon, "Crockett Faces Scrutiny Over Undisclosed Stocks And Marijuana Business Ties," October 2025. ¹⁴ The Daily Signal, "In Hot Water: Jasmine Crockett Faces Probe Over Conflicting Financial Disclosures," November 11, 2025.











