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Look Who is Right on the Money
Before Donald Trump was for accepting donations from wealthy donors, he was attacking it. But as one Republican said, “If there is one thing that unites both parties up here,…
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The Washington Post just explained how broken our campaign finance system is in two charts.
For background: in 2014, Congress slipped in a few legal changes to adjust how much the Republican and Democratic parties can raise for the 2016 general election and what they can spend the money on, like legal expenses and the party headquarters (as seen in the charts below).
But when coupled with the Supreme Court decision that same year that lifted how many candidates political parties a donor can contribute to … well, the political parties got a little more creative. Enter the jumbo joint-fundraising committees.
What’s a jumbo joint-fundraising committee? Put simply, a chain of accounts connected together that allow political parties to raise more money.
For example, the Trump Victory Fund created by Donald Trump with the Republican National Committee also includes 11 state parties (and that number can grow); the Hillary Victory Fund includes 32 state parties. When donors can contribute $10,000 per state, the math adds up quickly.
The worst part? There’s no guarantee how or where some of the money donated to these funds is spent, as reports have highlighted.
Images via the Washington Post
Issue: Money in Politics
Archived
Before Donald Trump was for accepting donations from wealthy donors, he was attacking it. But as one Republican said, “If there is one thing that unites both parties up here,…
Archived
Before Donald Trump was for accepting donations from wealthy donors, he was attacking it. But as one Republican said, “If there is one thing that unites both parties up here,…
Archived
The Democracy Fund is out with a new report this week examining why “Congress is broken,” is a common refrain inside and outside Washington. Their premise is that Congress “is…