campaign-finance
Donald Trump Begins to Grovel
Brendan O'Connor · 08/09/16 09:02AM
Donald Trump has always insisted that he can’t be bought: A key aspect of his appeal is the independence granted by his purportedly vast wealth. And while Hillary Clinton is also demonstrably wealthy, Trump continues to insist that she is not only corruptible but corrupt. “She’s got to do right for her donors,” he told voters at a rally in Ohio last week. “I’m going to do right for you.” His refusal to disclose his tax returns and his disingenuous explanation for why he can’t do so, however, put the lie to this claim—as does his refusal, now, to disclose the names of people who are helping him close the fundraising gap.
Trump Campaign Just Pulling Meaningless Fundraising Numbers Out of Thin Air at This Point
Brendan O'Connor · 07/07/16 12:25PM
On Thursday, the Trump campaign announced that it raised $51 million in the last week of May and the month of June—$26 million for the campaign itself and $25 million for the RNC. While there is no reason to doubt, necessarily, the accuracy of these numbers—and they are obviously a vast improvement over the campaign’s abysmal $3.1 million May fundraising efforts—it is important to remember they do not represent anything close to a full accounting of the campaign’s financial health.
Hamilton Nolan · 06/23/16 03:29PM
In Washington, DC, where 37% of residents are white, 62% of donors to the last mayoral race were white. In Chicago, where 39% of residents are white, 94% of donors to Rahm Emanuel’s mayoral campaign were white.
Everything's Working Out Great for the Coal Baron Accused of Coercing His Employees Into Political Donations
Brendan O'Connor · 05/26/16 02:20PM
Last week, despite what Democratic members of the Federal Election Committee called “compelling” evidence that an investigation should be pursued, the FEC closed its file on allegations that Robert Murray, America’s last and flushest coal baron, had coerced his employees into giving to his super PAC.
Donald Trump Files His Second Personal Financial Disclosure, Which Is Not a Tax Return
Brendan O'Connor · 05/17/16 05:30PM
Donald Trump has apparently filed his second annual personal financial disclosure form—not to be confused with a tax return—with the Federal Election Commission. On the last one, Trump confused revenue with income.
Republican Financiers Aren't Sure Where to Send Their Money Because the Trump Campaign Keeps Disavowing Super PACs
Brendan O'Connor · 05/16/16 07:23AM
Since he declared his candidacy for president, a number of “scam PACs” have taken advantage of the havoc Donald Trump—who needs to raise $1 billion if he wants to even be competitive in the general election—has wrought upon the Republican donor class. Now, as more of these groups insinuate themselves into the fundraising chaos, the financiers who have resigned themselves to a Trump candidacy aren’t sure where to send their money.
Donald Trump Can Be Bought
Brendan O'Connor · 05/12/16 12:20PM
On Tuesday, Donald Trump told the Associated Press that he doesn’t plan to release his tax returns before the presidential election in November. “There’s nothing to learn from them,” he said. Then, on Wednesday, he said he would release them. “I’ll release. Hopefully before the election I’ll release,” he told Fox News. “And I’d like to release.” (Doesn’t seem like it.) “You learn very little from a tax return,” he added. Maybe, but you learn a lot from someone’s ambivalence about releasing them.
The Clinton Campaign Is Keeping a Lot of That "Joint" Fundraising Money For Itself
Brendan O'Connor · 05/02/16 11:40AM
Just before launching the rather specifically-named Hillary Victory Fund, ostensibly formed to help “rebuild” the Democratic Party “from the ground up,” Hillary Clinton declared, “When our state parties are strong, we win. That’s what will happen.” According to Politico, however, less than 1 percent of the $61 million raised by the fund has remained with the state parties.
Watchdog Group Calls for Ethics Investigation into Vaping Congressman's Campaign Spending
Brendan O'Connor · 04/28/16 03:45PM
Representative Duncan Hunter, the vaping Republican from California, has already gotten in trouble this election season for his re-election campaign’s reckless spending. Now, a watchdog group has called for his finances to be audited, after discovering that the congressman may have used campaign funds to pay for a family trip to Italy last Thanksgiving.
Charles Koch, Who Has Spent His Entire Adult Life Working to Reshape American Politics, Declares Himself Uninterested in Politics
Brendan O'Connor · 04/25/16 09:35AM
In an interview with ABC News, fossil-fuel tycoon and billionaire Republican financier Charles Koch said that he and his brother David would not attend the GOP convention in July. “Why go?” he asked. “We’re not interested in politics.”
Hillary Clinton's Super PAC Is About to Drop $35 Million on Web Ads
Brendan O'Connor · 04/18/16 06:55AM
Priorities USA, the super PAC supporting Hillary Clinton, will spend $35 million in online advertising in Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Nevada, New Hampshire, Ohio, and Virginia, the Washington Post reports. So, look forward to lots of fun and quirky #hillary #politics content.
The Vaping Congressman Spent $1,302 of His Campaign Funds Last Year on Video Games
Brendan O'Connor · 04/05/16 07:05PM
According to his year-end campaign finance disclosure for 2015, Rep. Duncan Hunter, Republican from California, a.k.a. the Vaping Congressman, spend $1,302 on Steam Games from October 13 to December 16. This was, according to the filing, a “personal expense — to be paid back.”
Clinton Accuses Sanders Campaign of Lying About the Contributions She's Received from the Fossil Fuel Industry
Brendan O'Connor · 03/31/16 07:00PMOn Tuesday, following a rally at SUNY-Purchase, Greenpeace activist Eva Resnick-Day confronted Hillary Clinton, asking her whether she would stop taking money from the fossil fuel industry. Clinton, frustrated, jabbed her finger in Resnick-Day’s face: “I am so sick of the Sanders campaign lying about me.”
Want to Sit With Hillary Clinton at George and Amal Clooney's San Francisco Fundraiser? That'll Be $353,400
Brendan O'Connor · 03/24/16 08:05PM
On April 15, Politico reports, George and Amal Clooney will host a fundraiser for the Hillary Victory Fund at the Bay Area-home of venture capitalist Shervin Pishevar, of “Uber for Planes” notoriety. To sit at the head table, a couple must contribute or raise $353,400.
Hillary Clinton Raised $30.1 Million Last Month to Beat Bernie Sanders
Brendan O'Connor · 03/20/16 10:55PM
Last month, according to campaign finance reports, Hillary Clinton raised more than $30.1 million to be used in the Democratic primary—to be used, in other words, against Senator Bernie Sanders. From the New York Times:
Jeb Bush Loaned His Own Campaign $250,000 Last Month and Other Sad Facts
Brendan O'Connor · 03/20/16 06:15PM
In February (the month he dropped out), Jeb Bush loaned his presidential campaign $250,000, according to new campaign finance documents. Also: nearly half of the money Marco Rubio’s super PAC raised since he announced his candidacy came in February—the month before he quit.
Ben Carson Makes Good Joke About Former Aides Mismanaging His Campaign's Finances
Brendan O'Connor · 02/23/16 09:39PMOn Tuesday, Dr. Ben Carson “jokingly” speculated that aides who have left his campaign might have been intentionally undermining his efforts with ostensibly incompetent spending. “We had people who didn’t really seem to understand finances...or maybe they did—maybe they were doing it on purpose.” Haha, maybe!
What Happens to Jeb Bush's Sad Sack Super PAC Money Now?
Brendan O'Connor · 02/21/16 11:42PM
On Saturday, even as political reporters put the finishing touches on their Jeb Bush postmortems—do: “Fall of the house of Bush: how Jeb fell victim to hype, hysteria...and himself”; don’t: “Fall of the House of Bush: How last name and Donald Trump doomed Jeb”—the candidate and his super PAC gave us one more morbid look at the finances of a failing political dynasty.
Silicon Valley Loves Bernie Sanders
Brendan O'Connor · 02/09/16 10:21PM
Almost half of the top 20 employers whose workers contributed to the Sanders campaign last year were companies in Silicon Valley, the Wall Street Journal reports, including Google, Apple, and Microsoft. He received almost $105,000 from employees of the five largest tech firms in the last three months of 2015.