{"id":145735,"date":"2023-11-29T19:15:59","date_gmt":"2023-11-29T19:15:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/celebritywshow.com\/?p=145735"},"modified":"2023-11-29T19:15:59","modified_gmt":"2023-11-29T19:15:59","slug":"a-revenue-problem-donations-to-republicans-drop-as-worries-mount-about-the-partys-finances","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/celebritywshow.com\/world-news\/a-revenue-problem-donations-to-republicans-drop-as-worries-mount-about-the-partys-finances\/","title":{"rendered":"\u2018A revenue problem\u2019: Donations to Republicans drop as worries mount about the party\u2019s finances"},"content":{"rendered":"
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time.<\/p>\n
The Republican Party\u2019s finances are increasingly worrisome to party members, advisers to former president Donald Trump, and other operatives involved in the 2024 election effort, according to 10 people familiar with the matter.<\/p>\n
The Republican National Committee disclosed that it had $USUS9.1 million ($13.7 million) in cash on hand as of October 30, the lowest amount for the RNC in any Federal Election Commission report since February 2015. That compares with about $US20 million at the same point in the 2016 election cycle and about $US61 million four years ago, when Trump was in the White House.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Republican chairwoman Ronna McDaniel at the National Committee Meeting in Salt Lake City in 2022. <\/span>Credit: <\/span>AP <\/cite><\/p>\n The Democratic National Committee reported having $US17.7 million as of October 30, almost twice as much as the Republican Party, with one year before the election.<\/p>\n \u201cIt\u2019s a revenue problem,\u201d Tennessee RNC member Oscar Brock said. \u201cWe\u2019re going through the same efforts we always go through to raise money: the same donor meetings, retreats, digital advertising, direct mail. But the return is much lower this year. If you know the answer, I\u2019d love to know it. The staff has managed to tighten down on expenses to keep the party from going into the red.\u201d<\/p>\n Donors have not cut as many large checks to the RNC in recent years, and the party\u2019s small-dollar program has also suffered, according to people familiar with the party\u2019s finances, who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal party details.<\/p>\n Some donors aren\u2019t giving to the RNC because they think that will help Trump, which they don\u2019t want to do, these people said, while others have said they prefer to wait until 2024 to give. Some have grown frustrated with the party\u2019s leadership, people close to major donors said.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Republican presidential candidate and former President Donald Trump in Edinburg, Texas.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>AP<\/cite><\/p>\n The party cut certain expenditures this year after projected money did not come in, according to people familiar with the decisions.<\/p>\n An RNC spokeswoman said the party has nonetheless deployed staff in 15 swing states to start working on get-out-the-vote efforts and election monitoring. The party is also pursuing 70 lawsuits in 19 states challenging voting rules and is encouraging Republicans to use early voting and mail ballots – methods Trump and his allies have disparaged, even as RNC Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel repeatedly touts the importance of the \u201cBank Your Vote\u201d initiative.<\/p>\n All federal party committees – Democratic and Republican – have seen downturns in revenue since 2021, a trend that operatives usually attribute to inflation and donor fatigue. And occasionally during the Trump presidency, the DNC had about as much money on hand as the GOP has now, records show.<\/p>\n In an interview, McDaniel said that donors are currently more focused on giving to individual candidates during the presidential primary and that the party\u2019s fortunes will improve once there\u2019s a nominee.<\/p>\n \u201cI think there\u2019s more donors just fully committed to their candidate right now, saying I am all in, and once the nominee is set, I\u2019ll be there. That\u2019s what I hear more than anything. And they\u2019re really solidly in the camps of their candidate, which is normal,\u201d McDaniel said. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing unusual about this, because they know that once their candidate gets in that we will merge and that we\u2019ll be working together to win the White House.\u201d<\/p>\n The party\u2019s spending buttresses the Republican presidential nominee\u2019s campaign along with down-ballot races in the Senate and the House of Representatives. In 2020, the party was flush with cash, while the Trump campaign pulled advertisements because of a cash crunch. RNC officials say the party currently has no debt.<\/p>\n Still, the RNC\u2019s dwindling cash position – combined with Republican losses in this month\u2019s off-year elections, frustrations over the 2022 midterms and grousing over the chaotic presidential primary debates – has caused renewed questions about the committee\u2019s effectiveness and McDaniel\u2019s leadership.<\/p>\n We\u2019re going through the same efforts we always go through to raise money: the same donor meetings, retreats, digital advertising, direct mail. But the return is much lower this year.<\/p>\n \u201cThe RNC\u2019s electoral record since 2017 speaks for itself,\u201d said Virginia RNC member Patti Lyman, who opposed McDaniel when she was elected to another term in January. \u201cThe damage from that chair election goes far beyond the drop in donations. Our base was demoralised.\u201d<\/p>\n McDaniel, who took over as RNC chairwoman in 2017, is the party\u2019s second female leader and has been re-elected three times. She has tried to walk a tightrope, sticking close to Trump while also keeping anti-Trump members close, her allies say, earning majority support among the committee\u2019s 168 members.<\/p>\n The Wisconsin and Iowa GOP chairs sent unsolicited statements to The Washington Post<\/em> praising McDaniel\u2019s leadership of the party.<\/p>\n \u201cShe has strong support within the RNC. She won 110-plus votes during the election in January, and I think she has stronger support now than in January,\u201d said Michael Whatley, the North Carolina state chairman. \u201cI think her and the RNC team are focused on what they need to be focused on right now.\u201d<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Republican presidential hopeful Nikki Haley talks with voters during a town hall at Vittoria Lodge in Ankeny, Iowa.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>AP<\/cite><\/p>\n Whatley said that the party needs \u201cto raise more money\u201d but that he believes that will be remedied next year.<\/p>\n Maybe most important for McDaniel, Trump continues to back her – although more tentatively than in the past – and associates her with his 2016 win, advisers said. In an October 28 speech, Trump said that McDaniel has \u201cdone a fantastic job\u201d and called her \u201ca real good friend.\u201d<\/p>\n Still, he has publicly and privately expressed disappointment with the RNC holding presidential debates over his objections. His team believed that McDaniel would not continue with debates after his statements, and he expressed surprise when she announced new ones.<\/p>\n \u201cRNC must save money on lowest ever ratings debates. Use it against the Democrats to STOP THE STEAL! If not, REVAMP THE RNC, NOW!!!\u201d Trump wrote on Truth Social last week.<\/p>\n And Trump has also voiced doubts about the RNC\u2019s readiness for the 2024 campaign and commitment to fighting what he insists, without evidence, is voter fraud.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Ronna McDaniel, Republican National Committee chairwoman.<\/span>Credit: <\/span>AP<\/cite><\/p>\n Republican frustrations burst into the open this month after GOP losses in races for the Virginia legislature, the Kentucky governorship, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, and on an Ohio ballot initiative on abortion rights.<\/p>\n In October, the RNC rejected a request for additional funding for the Virginia GOP this autumn, said the state party chairman, Rich Anderson. RNC officials said they had budgeted based on a meeting earlier in the summer with Republican Governor Glenn Youngkin\u2019s team in which they didn\u2019t ask for money.<\/p>\n Other state party officials have grown frustrated when they\u2019ve asked the RNC for money to pay legal bills and been turned down, according to people familiar with the discussions.<\/p>\n In TV and podcast interviews after the elections, McDaniel repeatedly defended the RNC\u2019s refusal to pay, arguing that federal campaign finance laws limit the national committee\u2019s involvement in state elections. In fact, there are no limits on RNC transfers to state parties.<\/p>\n McDaniel has also faulted Republican campaigns for avoiding the subject of abortion instead of adopting a message she has encouraged, to prevent abortion after 15 weeks and allow for a range of exceptions. And her allies say that many of the election losses she has been blamed for were elections in which Trump was widely viewed as the main issue on the ballot.<\/p>\n Washington Post<\/strong><\/p>\n Get a note directly from our foreign <\/i><\/b>correspondents <\/i><\/b>on what\u2019s making headlines around the world. <\/i><\/b>Sign up for the weekly What in the World newsletter here<\/i><\/b>.<\/i><\/b><\/p>\nMost Viewed in World<\/h2>\n
From our partners<\/h3>\n