Ohio’s 7th District Financial Disclosure Breakdown
Who has stock, who doesn’t, and what the filings say about wealth, debt, pensions, retirement, and income
For each candidate, I totaled the disclosed asset ranges, totaled the disclosed liability ranges, and then calculated net worth as:
lowest possible net worth = minimum assets minus maximum liabilities
highest possible net worth = maximum assets minus minimum liabilities
Note: this is pretty standard for congressional net worth
I also separated out retirement and pension-style holdings where the filing clearly identified them as pensions, annuities, 401(k)s, 403(b)s, IRAs, Roth IRAs, or other tax-deferred retirement accounts. If an asset was just a mutual fund or insurance product without being clearly labeled as retirement, I did not force it into the retirement bucket.
You can search the disclosures yourself at the link below
https://disclosures-clerk.house.gov/FinancialDisclosure
Brian Poindexter
Based on his filing, Brian Poindexter disclosed three retirement-oriented assets: an Iron Workers Local 17 annuity plan valued at $100,001 to $250,000, an Iron Workers Local 17 pension plan valued at $15,001 to $50,000, and OPERS valued at $1,001 to $15,000. He also disclosed one liability, a student loan through American Education Services for $10,000 to $15,000.
Disclosed total assets: $116,003 to $315,000
Disclosed liabilities: $10,000 to $15,000
Estimated net worth range: $101,003 to $305,000
Retirement and pension total: $116,003 to $315,000
Individual stocks: none disclosed
Salary (2026 YTD): $21,000 (Iron Workers Local 17 JATC) + $3,831 (City of Brook Park) = $24,831
Salary (2025): $95,000 + $15,350 = $110,350
Bottom line: Poindexter’s filing is straightforward. Almost all of his disclosed wealth is tied up in union-related retirement and pension assets, and the only reported debt is a relatively modest student loan.
Laura D. Rodriguez-Carbone
Laura D. Rodriguez-Carbone’s filing discloses no assets, no liabilities, no positions, and no transactions. The filing does list earned income for her and her spouse, but there are no asset entries at all in Schedule A and no liabilities in Schedule D.
Disclosed total assets: $0
Disclosed liabilities: $0
Estimated net worth range based on disclosed assets and liabilities: $0
Retirement and pension total: none disclosed
Individual stocks: none disclosed
Salary (2026 YTD): $10,000 (spouse, Globe Life)
Salary (2025): $118,000
IQ Solutions (2025) $49,690.71
Bottom line: based on the disclosure form itself, there are no reportable assets on the page. That does not prove she has no wealth in real life. It means no reportable assets were disclosed on this filing. That distinction matters.
Michael Eisner
Michael Eisner’s filing shows a much more asset-heavy profile. He disclosed bank accounts, a 529 account, money market holdings, multiple New York Life products, and one especially large retirement asset: a New York Life Premier II individual retirement account invested in a Franklin Templeton portfolio, valued at $500,001 to $1,000,000. He also disclosed liabilities including American Express credit card debt of $15,001 to $50,000, a vacation club balance of $15,001 to $50,000, and a mortgage balance of $250,001 to $500,000.
Disclosed total assets: $850,012 to $1,826,000
Disclosed liabilities: $280,003 to $600,000
Estimated net worth range: $250,012 to $1,545,997
Retirement and pension total: $500,001 to $1,000,000 clearly identified as an IRA
Individual stocks: none disclosed
Salary (2026 YTD): $145,654.22 (Attorney fees)
Salary (2025): $140,038.76
Bottom line: Eisner has substantial disclosed assets, but also meaningful debt. His filing suggests a candidate with significant financial resources, though a large chunk of the lower-end net worth range gets eaten away by mortgage and consumer obligations. Also notable: no individual stock holdings appear on the filing.
Edward O’Donnell Fitzgerald
Fitzgerald’s filing is by far the most stock-heavy of the group. He disclosed a long list of individual equities, including Amazon, Apple, Broadcom, Eli Lilly, Microsoft, Reddit, Walmart, BlackRock, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, McDonald’s, UnitedHealth, Visa, and many others. He also disclosed Bitcoin and Solana, plus a rental property in Union Pier, Michigan valued at $500,001 to $1,000,000. Unlike some of the others, Fitzgerald reported no liabilities at all.
Disclosed total assets: $886,051 to $2,491,000
Disclosed liabilities: none disclosed
Estimated net worth range: $886,051 to $2,491,000
Retirement and pension total: $45,003 to $150,000 from two Ohio Public 401k accounts and one State of Mississippi 401k, all described as public pension-related holdings
Individual stocks: yes, extensively
Salary (2026 YTD): $50,000 (Angelo Benedetti, Inc.) + $52,000 (spouse ICN) + $1,700 (spouse UH) = $103,700
Salary (2025): $100,000 + $78,000 + $2,500 + $39,600 = $220,100
Bottom line: Fitzgerald’s filing shows the broadest direct exposure to individual stocks of any candidate in this batch. He has no disclosed liabilities, a sizable real estate asset, and a portfolio that is much more market-exposed than the others.
Scott Schulz
Scott Schulz’s filing is retirement-heavy to an even greater degree than Poindexter’s. He disclosed multiple tax-deferred and Roth retirement accounts, including TIAA retirement plans, Fidelity accounts, Vanguard retirement accounts, Victory Capital Roth IRAs, and large university-related plans. The largest single reported asset is a TIAA Baldwin Wallace University DC and Tax Deferred Savings Plan valued at $500,001 to $1,000,000. He also disclosed no liabilities.
Disclosed total assets: $899,020 to $2,135,000
Disclosed liabilities: none disclosed
Estimated net worth range: $899,020 to $2,135,000
Retirement and pension total: $829,013 to $1,910,000
Individual stocks: none disclosed
Salary (2026 YTD): $200,309.83 (Baldwin Wallace University) + $1,386 (school board) + $85,123.11 (spouse) = $286,818.94
Salary (2025): $170,595.61 + $3,375 + $11,763 + $17,004 + $500 = $203,237.61
Bottom line: Schulz’s wealth appears overwhelmingly concentrated in retirement-oriented accounts rather than direct stock picking. He disclosed no liabilities, no individual stock holdings, and a very large retirement base.
Note: Butchko, Mundy, & Donegan did not complete disclosure reports. They also did not file with the FEC for campaign fundraising.
The disclosure reports were analyzed with Chat GPT


