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When was Mike Johnson's most recent financial disclosure filed?
Executive summary
Available sources indicate the most recent House financial disclosure form for Speaker Mike Johnson on the Clerk of the House site is a 2022 Financial Disclosure Report that was digitally signed on August 11, 2023 [1]. Reporting and analysis pieces have repeatedly noted that Johnson’s “most recent” House disclosure (for 2022) lists no disclosed assets and has drawn attention amid questions about his finances [2] [3].
1. What the official docket shows: the 2022 report and its signature date
The raw, official file hosted by the House disclosures clerk shows a “Financial Disclosure Report” for Mike (James Michael) Johnson that is digitally signed “Hon. James Michael Johnson” with the date 08/11/2023 on the PDF available on the disclosures site [1]. That document is the explicit, primary-file evidence in the record provided in these search results and is the most recent house financial disclosure PDF referenced in this dataset [1].
2. How media describe “most recent” — context and why wording matters
Multiple outlets and explainers treating Johnson’s filings refer to his “most recent financial disclosure” as the 2022 report (filed in 2023) and emphasize that it lists “none disclosed” for assets and omits typical items such as bank accounts or retirement accounts, which is why reporters have centered that 2022 filing in coverage [2] [3]. That phrasing—“most recent” disclosure—reflects the fact that the 2022 reporting year was the last complete reporting period published in these sources [2].
3. Why the 2022 filing drew attention — omissions and rules
Journalists note that Johnson’s 2022 disclosure reports “none disclosed” under assets and does not show bank accounts or many other common line items; that absence is what prompted stories about the apparent lack of listed assets and questions about his finances [2] [3]. Coverage cites House ethics rules on thresholds for disclosing bank accounts and other items to explain how some line-item omissions can occur, though interpretations and implications differ across outlets [2].
4. Alternative viewpoints in the record — explanations offered
Sources include the explanatory frame that disclosure thresholds can mean routine accounts are not listed if below certain combined values, and ethicists quoted in reporting note that the rules can produce sparse-looking reports without implying wrongdoing [2]. At the same time, commentary pieces and opinion outlets characterize the omissions as “shady” or mysterious, portraying the same facts as suspicious [3]. Both perspectives appear in the available reporting: explanation of technical rules and skeptical takes about transparency [2] [3].
5. What this dataset does not show or confirm
Available sources do not mention a more recent financial disclosure than the 2022 report (filed with a signature dated 08/11/2023) in the provided results; there is no PDF or news piece in this search set showing a 2023, 2024, or 2025 annual disclosure superseding that form [1]. Available sources do not mention whether any supplemental filings, corrections, or updated asset disclosures were filed after August 11, 2023 in the documents supplied here [1].
6. Practical takeaway and where to look next for verification
If you need definitive, up-to-the-minute confirmation beyond the files and reportage in this collection, the authoritative places to check are the Clerk of the House disclosures portal (the PDF repository that contains the 2022 form signed 08/11/2023) and any updated disclosures posted there or at the Office of Government Ethics; in these search results the Clerk’s PDF is the primary source cited [1]. For context and interpretation, read explanatory reporting like Marketplace’s piece and profile articles that summarize the filing and rules [2] [3].
Limitations: this analysis relies only on the documents and reporting included in the search results you supplied; if you expect a disclosure filed after 08/11/2023, those documents are not present in the current dataset and thus cannot be confirmed here [1].