1. South Carolina Rep. Nancy Mace
2. Connecticut Rep. Rosa DeLauro
DeLauro shocked Congress by getting tatted at the age of 80, after one of her six grandchildren convinced her to get matching tattoos for her 18th birthday.
The design depicts a rose, representing her first name, and a petal in the center forms the letter 'D' for her last name, It also includes a stylized version of Italy, an homage to the country where her father emigrated from, said Daniel Robillard, DeLauro's press assistant.
Robillard said this is her first tattoo, but that she'll probably get more.
'I have four more grandkids who still haven’t turned 18 yet,' she said. 'So be on the lookout for more new ink!'
3. Pennsylvania Sen. John Fetterman
Fetterman revealed to NBC that, as of 2022, he had nine tattoos on his right forearm alone.
'Each one is a day on which someone died violently in Braddock, Pennsylvania, while I was mayor,' he wrote.
One of his first tattoos reads 01.06.06, the date 'Christopher Williams was shot dead while delivering pizzas.'
'This was a man about my age at the time. He had a 12-year-old daughter. I just couldn’t get over the fact that he was never going home to her,' he said.
Fetterman also has Braddock's zip code - 15104 - inked along on his right arm.
4. Former Pennsylvania State Rep. Brian Sims
A former member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, Sims has a tattoo spanning the length of his inner arm that spells out a Ben Franklin quote: 'Be civil to all; sociable to many; familiar with few; friend to one; enemy to none.'
'I represent a good chunk of Ben Franklin’s first district when he was Pa’s first Speaker of the House,' he wrote on X. 'These are some of his first words as Speaker (in the New Farmer’s Almanac font).'
5. Former Gov. Sarah Palin
The former Alaska governor has a small tattoo on her right inner forearm, which has been captured in her Instagram posts. It is unclear what it says.
The former Republican vice presidential nominee also reportedly has a tattoo of the big dipper on her ankle.
6. Former North Carolina Rep. Madison Cawthorn
7. Virginia Sen. Danica Roem
Roem Has an Equal Rights amendment tattooed on her arm, according to the Washington Post.
The former journalist said she 'always wanted to get ink done at some point,' and that it was a 'very special moment' for her to get the tattoo the day before the final vote.
Roem, a transgender woman, said it is her 'fundamental belief in equality for all' and that it is 'genuinely and quite literally part of me.'
8. Former California Rep. Duncan Hunter