Pacific Life Insurance Company
Life insurance company.
Based in NE
AI Overview
With $1.6M in lobbying spend across 32 quarterly filings, Pacific Life Insurance Company is a significant lobbying presence. They deploy 17 individual lobbyists Their lobbying covers 2 issue areas. Active from 2018 to 2025.
Spending Trend
View as table
| Year | Lobbying Spend |
|---|---|
| 2018 | $190K |
| 2019 | $200K |
| 2020 | $200K |
| 2021 | $200K |
| 2022 | $200K |
| 2023 | $200K |
| 2024 | $210K |
| 2025 | $240K |
Issues Lobbied
Lobbying Firms
Lobbyists
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: Financial, Taxation
Tax and finance issues affecting the insurance industry.
Tax and finance issues affecting the insurance industry, including S. 2526 - Retirement Enhancement and Savings Act of 2018 and H.R. 6757 - Family Savings Act of 2018.
Tax and finance issues affecting the insurance industry, including H.R. 1007 - Retirement Enhancement and Savings Act of 2019 and H.R. 1994 - Family Savings Act of 2019.
Tax and finance issues affecting the insurance industry, including H.R. 1007 - Retirement Enhancement and Savings Act of 2019 and H.R. 1994 - the SECURE Act.
Tax and finance issues affecting the insurance industry, including H.R. 1007 - Retirement Enhancement and Savings Act of 2019.
Tax and finance issues affecting the insurance industry. The provision proposed in SECURE 2.0 would provide federal securities law exemptions for certain investments by retirement plans under Section 403(b) of the Internal Revenue Code (the Code) to achieve parity with the exemptions provided for investments by other types of retirement plans. Advocacy for the continued funding of the Federal Insurance Office at the Department of Treasury.
Tax and finance issues affecting the insurance industry, including the provision proposed in SECURE 2.0 that would have provided federal securities law exemptions for certain investments by retirement plans under Section 403(b) of the Internal Revenue Code (the Code) to achieve parity with the exemptions provided for investments by other types of retirement plans. Advocacy for the continued funding of the Federal Insurance Office at the Department of Treasury.
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Data Sources: Senate LDA Filings
Last updated: February 2026
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