The guidance here stresses verification and dates. Where possible, use the campaign's own pages for attributed statements and the Federal Election Commission and state election pages for official filings and finance reports. Local news can provide useful context but should be checked against primary documents.
What this guide covers and how to use it
This guide summarizes public sources about Michael Carbonara and explains where readers can verify details about his candidacy and statements. The goal is to help voters, local residents, and reporters find primary documents and confirm facts rather than rely on unsourced summaries.
The guide covers six primary source types: the campaign website, campaign press releases, Federal Election Commission records, state election pages, neutral civic profiles, and local news coverage. For an overview of the campaign’s biographical and issue material, see the campaign About page About – Michael Carbonara for U.S. Congress.
Readers should note a few open items to check for updates: current fundraising totals, any new platform statements posted after the dates in this guide, and the finalized primary ballot for Florida’s 25th District. For the most recent campaign statements, start with the campaign site and check official filings for financial data.
How to use the rest of the article: each section explains one source type, shows typical items to look for, and ends with practical tips. Short action items are provided so you can verify a claim quickly and move to deeper checks if needed.
Primary campaign sources: what the campaign site and press releases include
About pages and issue statements
The campaign controls its About page and issue pages and is the primary source for biographical detail and stated priorities. Those pages present the candidate’s background, core themes, and policy priorities as authored or approved by the campaign, and they are the starting point for attributed statements about his platform About – Michael Carbonara for U.S. Congress.
Content on campaign About pages is a primary campaign statement, which means it reflects how the campaign frames biography and priorities. Use that material for direct quotes or to identify the campaign’s stated priorities, but treat claims about external facts as statements to be checked against independent records.
News, press releases, and dated posts
Press releases and dated news posts on the campaign site document announcements such as a campaign launch and issue rollouts, and they are useful for chronology and official statements. The campaign posted a public launch announcement in 2025 that outlines motivations and platform priorities Press Release: Michael Carbonara Announces Campaign for Congress (see the full launch post here).
When using press releases, note the date and any attributions inside the release. A dated post is a campaign record of what the campaign said on that date. For claims about fundraising, committee names, or ballot status, corroborate campaign statements with the relevant official filings.
Official public records: using the FEC and Florida elections pages to verify filings
What the FEC records show
Public FEC pages are the authoritative record for federal candidate registrations, committee names, and finance disclosures. To confirm committee names and review recent reports, use the FEC candidate and committee search tools to find the campaign record FEC candidate search (official FEC candidate page: https://www.fec.gov/data/candidate/H6FL25035/).
On FEC pages check the committee name, the filing dates for recent reports, and links to downloadable filings. These documents include periodic finance reports and sometimes explanatory cover pages that note reporting periods or amendments.
Join campaign updates and stay informed
Please visit the FEC candidate search page for authoritative committee and filing records when verifying federal finance documents.
Look for the committee name used consistently across filings. If you see different names, check report cover sheets and committee registration forms to confirm whether a committee was renamed or a separate committee was formed.
What the state Division of Elections records show
State election pages document candidate listings, filing status, and ballot qualification steps for state-managed elements of a federal campaign, such as ballot access and local filing deadlines Florida Division of Elections candidate pages.
Use the state site to confirm that a candidate has filed necessary state forms, to check deadlines, and to find contact information for local election offices. For federal candidates running in a state district, the state listing complements FEC records by confirming ballot steps and local filing stamps.
Practical tip: download a recent state candidate listing or certificates of candidacy when you need a dated proof of filing for a ballot office or local election office record.
Neutral civic sites and candidate profiles: what Ballotpedia and similar pages provide
Typical content on Ballotpedia
Neutral sites aggregate public filings, ballot status, and campaign announcements into a single profile that is useful for quick context. According to the Ballotpedia entry, Michael Carbonara is listed as a Republican candidate for Florida’s 25th Congressional District and the profile summarizes status and key dates Ballotpedia entry.
Ballotpedia and similar profiles often include an overview, a timeline of filings and announcements, and links to primary documents. These pages are helpful when you want a snapshot of a candidate’s status but they are secondary to original filings.
How to use these pages to cross-check dates and status
After reading a profile, use it as a guide to locate the primary filings it cites. Confirm committee names, filing dates, and report links on the FEC site, and verify any state filing dates on the state elections page.
Checklist item: if a profile lists a filing date, open the corresponding FEC or state filing and confirm the document date and the committee listed on the form. If the profile lacks a direct link, treat the summary as a lead and find the primary record yourself.
Local reporting and event coverage: strengths and limitations
What local news adds
Local outlets provide contemporaneous coverage of campaign launches, public events, and quotes from campaign spokespeople. That coverage can be useful for event chronology and for sourcing direct quotes that the campaign released to the press Sun Sentinel coverage and other local stories such as FL Voice coverage.
Local reporting is valuable for understanding how and where a campaign has been visible, but it is secondary reporting. For legal or numerical claims such as fundraising totals or filing status, verify with primary documents listed on FEC or state pages.
Quick steps to use the FEC candidate search and the Florida Division of Elections lookup
Use official pages for final verification
Examples of useful details in local coverage include event dates, direct candidate quotes, and reported attendance. When a news story cites a filing or a finance total, follow the story’s lead to the primary document and confirm the reported numbers yourself. Also check event pages on the campaign site events for local appearances and dates.
A practical verification framework: step-by-step checks for voters
Quick verification checklist
Start with the campaign site for the candidate’s biographical summary and platform language. Then confirm the candidate and committee on the FEC, check state candidate listings, consult Ballotpedia for dates, and review local reporting for event context. This sequence helps you move from statements to primary documents efficiently.
Step 1, read the campaign About and issue pages to identify exact language you want to verify. Step 2, search the FEC candidate database for the committee name and recent finance reports. Step 3, confirm state filing status on the Florida Division of Elections site. Step 4, cross-check dates on Ballotpedia. Step 5, use local reporting for event details, then verify any referenced documents.
Deeper checks for campaign finance and biographical claims
For finance verification, open the most recent FEC filings and check the report cover page and the itemized schedules. Fiscal items to confirm include cash on hand, contributions listed, and whether the report is an amendment or an original filing FEC candidate search.
For biographical or business claims, prefer the campaign’s primary bio page and reputable neutral profiles for corroboration. If a business claim lacks verifiable documents, flag it for further research and note the absence of primary sources.
Common research mistakes and how to avoid them
Mistakes that lead to misinformation
Common errors include relying only on campaign messaging, accepting secondary summaries as definitive, and treating unsourced social posts as factual. These mistakes can create inaccurate timelines or inflated claims about finance and ballot status Sun Sentinel coverage.
Another frequent issue is confusing committee names when a campaign uses similar legal names across different filings. Always check the exact committee registration on FEC pages to avoid mixing records FEC candidate search.
Voters should start with the campaign site for statements and use the FEC and Florida Division of Elections pages to confirm committee registrations, finance reports, and ballot qualification steps.
Practical avoidance tips: always locate the primary filing when a number or legal status is reported, look for dated press releases when tracking announcements, and confirm committee names and filing dates before quoting totals or legal status.
Wrap up: quick checklist and next steps for voters
One-page checklist to save or print
Printable checklist: 1) Read the campaign About and issue pages for stated priorities. 2) Search the FEC candidate and committee pages for registrations and finance reports. 3) Check the Florida Division of Elections for ballot steps and filing stamps. 4) Consult Ballotpedia for dates. 5) Use local news for event context and then verify any quoted documents.
Where to check for updates: the campaign site for new statements, the FEC for the latest finance filings, and the Florida Division of Elections for state-level filing status. Together these primary records show the candidate’s public footprint as of the cited dates.
Public records collectively indicate that the campaign maintains an active site with an About page and issue statements, the campaign issued a launch announcement in 2025, Ballotpedia lists the candidate and summarizes status, and federal and state pages document filings and committee records as the authoritative sources for finance and ballot steps.
The campaign website's About page and issue pages provide the candidate's official biographical summary and stated priorities.
Use the FEC candidate and committee search pages to open the campaign's filed finance reports and check report cover pages and itemized schedules.
Check the Florida Division of Elections candidate listings and local election office records for filing stamps and ballot qualification steps.
This guide is meant to help voters locate and verify documents. If you need a specific filing or an older report, use the FEC and state lookup tools to download the original documents.
References
- https://michaelcarbonara.com/about
- https://michaelcarbonara.com/contact/
- https://michaelcarbonara.com/news/launch-2025
- https://michaelcarbonara.com/michael-carbonara-launches-campaign-for-congress/
- https://www.fec.gov/data/candidate/?q=Michael+Carbonara
- https://www.fec.gov/data/candidate/H6FL25035/
- https://dos.myflorida.com/elections/candidates/
- https://ballotpedia.org/Michael_Carbonara
- https://www.sun-sentinel.com/2025/11/10/michael-carbonara-files-to-run-for-congress/
- https://flvoicenews.com/michael-carbonara-secures-endorsements-from-coconut-creek-and-pompano-beach-city-commissioners-ahead-of-2026-congressional-run/
- https://michaelcarbonara.com/events/
- https://michaelcarbonara.com/issues/

