National Disability Rights Network
Based in DC
AI Overview
With $472K in lobbying spend across 33 quarterly filings, National Disability Rights Network is an active lobbying client. They deploy 11 individual lobbyists Their lobbying covers 21 issue areas. Active from 2018 to 2025.
Spending Trend
View as table
| Year | Lobbying Spend |
|---|---|
| 2018 | $56K |
| 2019 | $45K |
| 2020 | $40K |
| 2021 | $59K |
| 2022 | $39K |
| 2023 | $31K |
| 2024 | $53K |
| 2025 | $148K |
Issues Lobbied
Lobbying Firms
Lobbyists
Government Agencies Targeted
These are the government entities that National Disability Rights Network disclosed contacting in their lobbying filings.
What They Lobby About
These are actual descriptions from their quarterly lobbying disclosure filings, summarizing what they lobbied Congress and federal agencies about.Issue areas: Health Issues, Medicare/Medicaid, Marine/Maritime, Communications, Civil Rights and 16 more
Working against the repeal of the Affordable Care Act (ACA)
Also arguing against the changing of the positive impact of the ACA through regulations and executive orders.
Finally, pushing back again
Working to maintain regulations and guidance on Medicare and Medicaid changes that were part of the ACA.
Also working on P&As receiving death reports as it relates to the use of seclusion and restra
Working to ensure that legislation and regulations regarding the Coast Guard, maritime, or boats consider the accessibility and safety of people with disabilities to these entities.
Following legislation and regulations that will either positively or negatively impact the ability of people with disabilities to use the full range of communications devices. This includes all forms
NDRN continued to work for legislative fixes to ensure P&A access and authority remain strong and vibrant. We also worked to ensure the regulations and legislation concerning what is home and communi
Related Analysis
Related Investigations
Similar Clients
Explore More
Data Sources: Senate LDA Filings
Last updated: February 2026
This site is an independent journalism project. Analysis and editorial content are not affiliated with or endorsed by any government agency.