Key Points
- Rep. Mikie Sherrill disclosed a net worth of more than $11.3 million in her latest filing.
- The New Jersey congresswoman reported assets between $733,209 and $4.3 million in 2019.
- The increase comes as Sherrill campaigns for governor.
MORRISTOWN, NJ – Rep. Mikie Sherrill’s wealth has surged in recent years, with new financial disclosures showing the Democratic lawmaker and gubernatorial candidate now reporting a net worth of more than $11.3 million.
In her 2019 disclosure, Sherrill listed assets valued between $733,209 and $4,321,000. But in her latest filing, submitted in August, she and her husband revealed exact asset values that bring their total to $11,321,863.
Net worth nearly triples
The increase represents a $7 million gain from the high end of her 2019 estimates, according to records reviewed by the Washington Free Beacon. Sherrill, who represents New Jersey’s 11th Congressional District, earns an annual congressional salary of $174,000.
Gubernatorial campaign context
The disclosure comes as Sherrill intensifies her run for governor, placing her finances under heightened scrutiny. When asked by Charlamagne Tha God about her wealth increase during her time in Congress, Sherrill was speechless, stuttering along with no real, honest answer.
Sherrill’s filing underscores the significant growth in her personal finances as she moves from the House toward a statewide contest.
Rep. Mikie Sherrill, the Democratic nominee for New Jersey governor, is facing intensifying scrutiny over her family’s stock trading as financial disclosures show a sharp rise in her net worth during her time in Congress.
Analyses of her reports estimate her assets grew from as low as $1.3 million in 2019 to as much as $13.9 million by 2024, a midpoint increase of roughly $7 million. Critics say the gains raise questions about transparency and conflicts of interest.
Trading patterns under review
Disclosures reveal hundreds of transactions, largely through a UBS brokerage account managed by her husband, Jason Hedberg, a former Google executive now in finance. Investments covered technology firms like Alphabet and Meta, defense contractors including General Dynamics and Raytheon, and financial institutions.
A significant wave of trades occurred in 2020 during pandemic market volatility, despite Sherrill’s office stating she had stopped individual stock holdings that February. Some assets later surged in value, with one cited example gaining more than 90 percent.
Sherrill does not use a blind trust, leaving critics to question whether her committee assignments on defense and technology created conflicts. Her campaign points out that by August 2025, she had shifted all investments into exchange-traded funds (ETFs), disclosing exact values of $4.43 million in brokerage holdings.
Controversies and campaign fallout
Sherrill was fined $400 in 2021 for late filing of trades under the STOCK Act, one of nearly 50 lawmakers penalized that year. She paid the fine immediately, but opponents seized on the lapse.
Reports also noted trades in defense stocks around the time of closed-door briefings, though no charges were filed. Sherrill has denied any wrongdoing, calling her trades “independent” and saying individual stock activity ended in 2020.
Republican rival Jack Ciattarelli has made the trades central to his campaign, accusing Sherrill of “tripling her net worth” and using the slogan “Mikie Made Millions.” The controversy gained traction after a viral radio interview in May where she appeared unsettled by questions about the $7 million figure.
Reform push
Despite the criticism, Sherrill co-sponsored the bipartisan TRUST Act earlier this year, which would prohibit members of Congress and their families from trading individual stocks. Her campaign stresses her background as a Navy pilot and federal prosecutor, pointing to her disclosures as evidence of transparency.
The $7 million estimate remains just that—an approximation based on disclosure ranges—yet it has become a defining issue of New Jersey’s governor’s race.