(AP Photo/Jeff Dean, File)

Ohio Senate candidate J.D. Vance still has not released his personal financial disclosure since blowing past the Oct. 29 deadline.

The venture capitalist’s campaign already received a 90-day extension to submit the disclosure, a financial disclosure form required by federal law for U.S. Senate candidates. Such document makes a Senate candidate’s major income sources public information for voters. If Vance’s campaign misses the extra 30-day grace period deadline later this month, it must pay a $200 penalty.

Vance campaign spokesman Taylor Van Kirk told Roger Sollenberger of The Daily Beast that the campaign is “working on the report” and plans to submit it by the new deadline.

Although his 2016 memoir “Hillbilly Elegy” helped craft his pitch that he’s for small-town Ohioans, his subsequent career as a venture capitalist in the tech industry threatens to undercut his position as an anti-Big-Tech warrior. After graduating from Yale University, he worked for multiple firms created by Paypal founder Peter Thiel and AOL co-founder Steve Case. Vance then founded his own fund, Naya Capital, with funding from Thiel, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt and internet pioneer Marc Andreesen.

When a PAC backing a possible Vance Senate bid launched, Thiel donated $10 million to it. The Mercer family, a billionaire tech venture family that helped fund Breitbart and Parler, gave a “significant” amount to the PAC as well.

In April, Vance tweeted, “Establishment Republican apologies for our oligarchy should always come with the following disclaimer: ‘Big Tech pays my salary.’” Dozens of Twitter users immediately pointed out his PAC’s contributions from Thiel and other tech giants, although Vance claims Thiel isn’t like other Big Tech billionaires.

“Ohioans have to pay their bills on time but for a Silicon Valley millionaire like Vance, deadlines are merely suggestions,” Michael Beyer, a spokesperson for the Ohio Democratic Party, said last week when Business Insider released its original story. “Now, voters are being forced to wait to learn the extent of Vance’s Big Tech ties – but just like how he tried to cover up his anti-Trump past, Vance will fail to hide the truth from Ohioans.”