More 'Dark Money' for President Biden
A new FEC disclosure shows the president's main super PAC continues to rely on dark money for the majority of its funding.
Page 5
A new FEC disclosure shows the president's main super PAC continues to rely on dark money for the majority of its funding.
The most complete, up-to-date view of AIPAC PAC donations to congressional candidates.
New disclosures covering March show that AIPAC's PAC made $4.1 million in contributions to federal candidates, while its super PAC raised another $1.8 million ahead of a spending wave against progressive candidates.
Democratic Majority for Israel (DMFI) super PAC brought in most of the funding in its new FEC report from a handful of private equity executives and investment industry donors.
In Montana and other Senate battlegrounds, super PACs backing Republicans have been heavily funded by finance billionaires Stephen Schwarzman, Ken Griffin, and others.
Dark money has flooded into outside spending groups pledging support for Biden, including one out of every two dollars to the president's primary super PAC.
In a repeat of his last election in 2018, Montana Democratic Senator Jon Tester is benefitting from outside spending by the American Bankers Association.
Labor unions sought to pressure the DNC into banning anti-union vendors in 2022, but a review of FEC disbursements data reveals the party group is still paying millions of dollars to firms that offer union avoidance services.
The donations are on top of the approximately $25 million the company has recently donated to pro-crypto super PACs.
Chevron, Valero, and Devon Energy were among the largest donors to the super PACs aligned with Mike Johnson and Mitch McConnell last year.