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real-human



Joined: 02 Jul 2011
Posts: 14925
Location: on earth

PostPosted: Fri Apr 19, 2024 12:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

still no huge money from rich partisan dems... all small donors vs what the right wingers get in their dark money and russian and oil dictator, chinese attacking dems that has never been quantified. well a pittance is the 3 billion Trumps son in law got from oil dictators. the dictators renting entire floors at trump hotels and no one staying in them, gifting trump money for his golf liv fake company. ie payoff... bribe

https://www.airbnb.com/rooms/6940822?guests=1&adults=1&s=67&unique_share_id=06467675-f4f9-449a-8a09-f3708c984665

These Are The Big-Money Donors Backing Trump—As He Trails Biden’s Fundraising


Quote:
Acoalition of wealthy donors gave large sums to former President Donald Trump during the first quarter, helping him narrow the fundraising gap with President Joe Biden.

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Republican presidential candidate, former President Donald Trump speaks at a rally outside Schnecksville Fire Hall on April 13, 2024 in Schnecksville, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images) Getty Images
Republican presidential candidate, former President Donald Trump speaks at a rally outside Schnecksville Fire Hall on April 13, 2024 in Schnecksville, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images) Getty Images
© Provided by Forbes
Key Facts
The Trump 47 Committee, his joint fundraising vehicle with the Republican National Committee, which can accept checks up to $824,600 per donor, took in $23.5 million in the first three months of the year, according to Federal Election Commission filings made public Monday—money divided among his campaign, his Save America Leadership PAC that’s been footing his legal bills, the RNC and state parties.


Intercontinental Exchange founder Jeffrey Sprecher, hotel magnate and former DeSantis donor Robert Bigelow, TD Ameritrade founder J. Joe Ricketts and former Georgia senator Kelly Loeffler, who is married to Sprecher, all gave the maximum amount to the Trump 47 Committee.
Casino mogul Phil Ruffin, sugar magnate Jose Fanjul, Energy Transfer pipeline company co-founder Kelcy Warren, former pro wrestling executive and ex-SBA Administrator Linda McMahon, Los Angeles real estate billionaire Geoffrey Palmer, former Renaissance Technologies CEO Robert Mercer, casino mogul Steve Wynn and hedge fund billionaire John Paulson also each donated more than $800,000 to Trump 47.

The Trump-aligned super PAC Right for America also reported raising $13 million in the first quarter, not including the $12 million it raised at a dinner at Mar-a-Lago last week, according to The New York Times.



Key Background
Trump is making inroads on Biden’s fundraising lead after facing a cash crunch prior to him clinching the GOP nomination as the former president’s fundraising apparatus spent significant sums paying lawyers defending him in his various criminal and civil cases. Trump’s campaign and the Republican National Committee said earlier this month it brought in more than $65.6 million in March, more than tripling its February fundraising haul, and ending the month with more than $93 million in cash. Trump Save America, his joint fundraising committee with his campaign, also reported raising $65.8 million in the first quarter. The fundraising totals do not include the $50.5 million Trump’s campaign said it raised at a fundraiser Paulson hosted at his Palm Beach home on April 6.


$51.5 million. That’s how much the Save America PAC has spent on Trump’s legal fees as of April 6, accounting for 67% of the total spent this year.

Tangent
Biden’s campaign and the Democratic National Committee, after raising more than $53 million in February, still out-fundraised Trump’s campaign in March, bringing in $90 million and ending the month with $192 million in cash on hand, what his campaign said is the largest war chest ever amassed by any Democratic nominee at this point in the election cycle. The pro-Biden Future Forward PAC, meanwhile, raised $20.4 million in the first quarter. The haul includes $6 million from Renaissance Technologies’ billionaire co-founder James Simons and his wife Marilyn, $6 million from LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, $7 million from Democratic megadonor and Chicago media mogul Fred Eychaner, $4 million from Dreamworks co-founder Jeffrey Katzenberg and the Katzenberg family trust, and $1 million from former Facebook chief operating officer, billionaire Sheryl Sandberg. The Biden Victory Fund, the president’s joint fundraising committee with his campaign, the Democratic National Committee and state parties, reported raising $121.3 million in the first quarter, including $930,000 from lawyer and Trump adversary George Conway, $930,000 from Pinterest co-founder Paul Sciarra, $930,000 from Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz and $923,000 from Eychaner.
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real-human



Joined: 02 Jul 2011
Posts: 14925
Location: on earth

PostPosted: Fri May 10, 2024 3:03 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

and gee oil industry may put in a billion more... Kushner got what 3 billion already...

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/trump-pressed-oil-executives-to-give-1-billion-for-his-campaign-people-in-industry-say/ar-BB1m7xwI?ocid=winp2fptaskbar&cvid=d3c6642ef7b34e1a90c1064c9cea3d8d&ei=23&sc=shoreline

Trump pressed oil executives to give $1 billion for his campaign, people in industry say


Quote:
Former President Donald Trump asked oil industry executives last month to donate $1 billion to aid his campaign to retake the White House, three people familiar with the conversation told POLITICO — a request that campaign finance experts said appeared troubling but is probably legal.

The request, first reported Thursday by The Washington Post, occurred during a meeting of industry executives at the former president’s home in Palm Beach, Florida.

The oil industry has a long list of policy actions it would want Trump to take, including dismantling parts of President Joe Biden’s green agenda and rolling back pollution regulations that threaten to crimp their profits. As POLITICO reported Wednesday, oil executives are also preparing some highly specific requests for Trump, including executive orders they hope he would sign if reelected.
At the very least, the $1 billion ask points to problems with laws governing money in politics, said Erin Chlopak, senior campaign finance director at the watchdog group Campaign Legal Center.

"At a high level, it perfectly captures so much of what’s wrong with our big money campaign finance system,” said Chlopak, who was a senior lawyer at the Federal Elections Commission, which monitors campaign contributions and spending.

Related video: Trump asks oil companies to raise $1B, vows rollback of Biden's green policies (Straight Arrow News)
They spent $2 trillion, the green news scam,

Trump asks oil companies to raise $1B, vows rollback of Biden's green policies

Trump, who is occupying most of his days in a Manhattan courtroom fighting allegations of falsifying business records, has lagged Biden in fundraising.

The April dinner at Trump's Mar-a-Lago Club was described as a roundtable discussion on energy security, according to one person familiar with the event who was granted anonymity to discuss the private gathering. It included executives from oil companies Exxon Mobil, Chevron, ConocoPhillips and Continental Resources as well as from natural gas producer EQT and gas exporter Cheniere Energy, and the trade association American Petroleum Institute.

One person not at the dinner — Dan Eberhart, chief executive of the Denver-based oil company Canary LLC — said participants told him that Trump asked the attendees to contribute a combined $1 billion for his campaign. Two industry representatives whose companies attended the meeting confirmed the amount to POLITICO.

Trump’s request is “shocking,” but it would almost certainly not break the law, said Meredith McGehee, an independent expert on government ethics and campaign finance. Unless Trump wrote on a napkin during the meeting an exact amount of money he wanted deposited in a specific campaign vehicle in exchange for a specific policy goal, there’s little chance it would violate bribery laws as currently interpreted by the Supreme Court, McGehee said.

“The state of the law and the state of the enforcement agency is abysmal,” McGehee said in an interview. “But this is a scandal, and the notion that our government works where candidates go to industry and promise government action in exchange for large amounts of money is an indictment of the system.”

Another campaign finance expert expressed doubts that Trump's behavior violated the law.

“Isn’t that what campaigning is?” Bradley Smith, chair of the Institute for Free Speech and former chair of the Federal Election Commission, said of Trump’s ask to the oil executives.

“Certainly if one is an office holder and one promises a specific federal action like, ‘You'll get this permit,' or something like that, you have an issue. But to make a sort of general pledge, ‘You’ve got to give me lots of money because I'm really going to help out your business,’ it's fine,” he said.

Smith added: “It’s a minor difference of degree from Joe Biden saying, ‘Hey, young people, vote for me, I’m going to forgive your student loans.’”

Trump could be liable for violating rules against candidates asking individuals to contribute more than the federal limit on campaign contributions, Chlopak said.

Campaign finance laws limit individual contributions to $3,300 per election to individual campaigns and $5,000 to political action committees. Super PACs can take unlimited donations, but candidates aren't allowed to solicit funds for them.

“To the extent that there is this suggestion that these executives raise a $1 billion on Trump’s behalf, that would potentially violate federal law,” Chlopak said. “A billion dollars is far above the limits. A candidate can’t make that request.”

Craig Holman, government affairs lobbyist at the watchdog group Public Citizen, said violating the law would have to involve a clear quid pro quo in which Trump offered to take an action because of the donation.

“Usually candidates don't really tie their policy positions together with campaign contributions," Holman said. "Usually they just talk about their policy and then encourage people to contribute to their campaigns. But here, it's particularly egregious, because Trump is calling for a certain figure of money from the oil industry. And it's a huge figure. That makes it unusual.”

Oil executives want Trump to end the Biden administration's pause on new natural gas export permits and expand the number of offshore drilling lease sales in the Gulf of Mexico made available by Biden's Interior Department.

At the April dinner, Trump also promised to slash the Biden administration’s tax credits for electric vehicles and spend less government money developing wind power, according to The Washington Post. Those are both major themes he's sounded repeatedly in his public rallies and stump speeches.

Trump said the $1 billion contribution would fuel his presidential campaign, but at least some executives present believed the money would also be used to pay the lawyers defending him in various court cases, Eberhart added.

“I think everyone knows part of it is going to his legal expenses,” Eberhart said in an interview.

One political action committee Trump controls, Save America PAC, has spent tens of millions of dollars on legal bills for the former president and his allies, but he hasn't been directing donations to that channel for several months. One of his joint fundraising committees with the Republican National Committee does send a portion of its money to Save America, but those contributions are limited to $5,000 for each donor. And his super PAC can send only $2.75 million more to Save America as of the end of March.

In response to questions, Trump campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt issued a statement to POLITICO but did not answer questions about the Mar-a-Lago event.

“Joe Biden is controlled by environmental extremists who are trying to implement the most radical energy agenda in history and force Americans to purchase electric vehicles they can’t afford,” Leavitt said in the statement. “President Trump is supported by people who share his vision of American energy dominance to protect our national security and bring down the cost of living for all Americans.”

Chlopak, from the Campaign Legal Center, said getting so much money from the oil executives would make him essentially indebted to them if he wins.

“There are certainly high concerns about the implications of who controls the people who are looking to gain office when those candidates are so indebted to particular people or entities or interest when they’re supposed to be representing the people,” she said.

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