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The main campaign arm for House Democrats raised $56.5 million from July through the end of September, according to numbers first shared with CBS News.
Their sum means the committee has raised more than their Republican counterparts in that same period, as the party that holds control of the House faces massive super PAC spending and historical headwinds going into November’s midterm elections.
The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) raised $27.5 million in September, with $14 million of that coming from “grassroots funding” or donations of $200 or less. They raised $10.5 million more than their counterparts at the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) for the month, who raised $16.9 million in September.
The committee attributes their numbers to energy from Democratic voters after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, putting the topic of abortion access front and center in these midterms.
Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images
Democrats have overperformed or won in several special elections after the Dobbs decision, including holding New York’s 19th District, which Mr. Biden won by just one point in 2020. They also flipped Alaska’s at-Large seat, which was previously held by the late Republican Rep. Don Young.
In a statement, DCCC Chairman Sean Patrick Maloney thanked House Democrats, Speaker Nancy Pelosi and President Joe Biden for the “hard work… [they] are putting in to guarantee Democrats can continue fighting for American families.”
Mr. Biden held a fundraiser Wednesday in Los Angeles for the DCCC.
“While House Republicans scramble to ‘moderate’ their extreme MAGA, out-of-touch candidates, House Democrats aren’t taking anything for granted as we continue our fight to lower prices, restore Roe’s guarantee of reproductive freedom, and safeguard our Democracy from those seeking to overthrow it in their own selfish ploy for power,” Maloney said in a statement.
The NRCC raised $42.3 million from July through the end of September, $14 million less than the DCCC for the quarter.
The NRCC said they raised $257.4 million this cycle and has $92.3 million cash on hand. Their cash on hand number is nearly $40 million more than what they had at this point in the cycle in 2020, when House Republicans surpassed expectations and flipped 15 seats.
The DCCC has raised over $295 million this cycle, according to a CBS News analysis of campaign finance reports. The DCCC did not share how much cash it has on hand at time of publication.
NRCC chairman Tom Emmer said “our candidates will have the resources they need to prosecute the case against Democrats’ failed agenda.”
The advantage House Democrats have with their party committees is in contrast with the main House super PACs for both sides.
The Republican-backed Congressional Leadership Fund announced Wednesday that they brought in $73 million from July through the end of September and have $114 million cash on hand. They also said they set a record in raising $295 million throughout the whole cycle. This number is in combination with what their advocacy group, the American Action Network, has raised.
The House Democrats’ House Majority PAC raised $55 million from July through the end of September and $134 million throughout the whole cycle, $86 million less than what the Congressional Leadership Fund brought in.
“We continue to shatter records this cycle because there is palpable enthusiasm behind electing a Republican Majority and ending Democrat single party rule,” said CLF President Dan Conston, who added they’ve put themselves “in an excellent position.. to execute on our plans to help win the House Majority.”
House Republicans need a net gain of just five seats to flip the chamber for a total of 218. The latest CBS News battleground tracker on House races estimated that Republicans will win 223 seats in November, compared to 212 for Democrats. This estimate has gradually shrunk for House Republicans who were projected to win 230 seats in July and 226 seats in August.
But Republican strategists and groups feel confident the political environment with one month left still favors them – and that they’re adequately spending on ads in this homestretch.
Two GOP-aligned PACs, the Congressional Leadership Fund and American Action Network, have a combined $190 million in TV ad reservations through the end of the year, while the House Majority PAC and its House Majority Forward non-profit have spent a combined $135 million, according to data from advertisement tracking firm AdImpact.
Meanwhile, the DCCC has spent $88.3 million on advertisements, in addition to coordinated buys with several of their most vulnerable members. Over $9.7 million has been spent in Las Vegas, a market that reaches several targeted incumbents, and over $3.75 million in Maine’s 2nd District, represented by Democratic Rep. Jared Golden.. The group has also spent $5.1 million in Michigan’s 7th District, represented by Democratic Rep. Elissa Slotkin, and over $3.7 million in California’s 22nd District, where Democrats are trying to upset Republican Rep. David Valadao.
By comparison, the NRCC has spent $91.2 million on advertisements throughout the year, in addition to coordinated buys with campaigns. They’ve spent over $6.75 million in the Los Angeles market, which covers vulnerable incumbent Republican Reps. Mike Garcia, Young Kim and Michelle Steel, as well as Democrat Rep. Katie Porter. According to AdImpact, they’ve also spent at least $5 million in ads in four districts: Michigan’s 7th district (Slotkin), California’s 22nd District (Valadao), Virginia’s 7th District (Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger) and Maine’s 2nd District (Golden).
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Democratic candidates are pouring their own campaign cash into House races—outspending the other party by more than two-fold—but GOP issue groups are making up for the lag in this historically expensive election cycle, new data shows.
Rep. Elissa Slotkin greets US President Joe Biden upon arrival at Capital Region International … [+]
Vying to maintain control of the House, Democratic candidates have spent or reserved more than $167 million on ads this election cycle, more than doubling Republican candidates’ $72 million, according to data reported Wednesday by the political ad tracking firm AdImpact Politics.
Democratic issue groups and candidates together are on track to spend a total of $409 million before election day, $57 million more than Republican groups and candidates, adding up to $761 million in ad spending for candidates from both parties and their supporters.
Both parties are scheduled to spend nearly half of those totals in the final stretch before election day—$185 million for Democrats and $168 million on the Republican side over the next four weeks.
The most expensive House races so far this year are two battleground races in Michigan and Nevada where a pair of incumbent Democrats, Reps. Elissa Slotkin (Mich.) and Susie Lee (Nev.), are in nail-biter competitions to hang on to their seats—both parties have spent a combined $27 million on ads for each seat, with Democrats spending about $2.5 million more in both races.
On both sides of the aisle, issue groups like the Republican-aligned One Nation and the Democrat-aligned NARAL Pro-Choice America PAC are spending more money to assist candidates than their own campaigns, but Republican political action committees have spent or reserved about $34 million more on ads this cycle for a total of $268 million, according to AdImpact.
Big Number: $1.3 billion. That’s the total spent or reserved on advertisements in all races—including congressional and gubernatorial contests—for both parties this month, putting October on track to break September’s record as the fourth most expensive month for political ads in history, according to AdImpact.
Key Background: Higher spending on the Democratic side isn’t entirely surprising, considering they simply have more members in the lower chamber, with a slim 222-213 majority. Election forecasters think Democrats will likely lose control of the House, which is typical for the president’s party in a midterm election cycle, especially since President Joe Biden’s approval ratings have slid sharply over the past several months and voters view the economy and inflation as top concerns. However, the reversal of Roe v. Wade has slightly improved Democrats’ outlook, according to FiveThirtyEight’s election forecast. In the Senate, which is currently evenly split between both parties, Democrats are slightly favored to maintain its majority.
Tangent: At least 59 of the country’s billionaires have made nearly $100 million in donations to two super PACs battling to win the House, with the majority of that money—$79 million—going to the GOP’s war machine, the Congressional Leadership Fund. The top billionaire donors include crypto exchange founder Sam Bankman-Fried on the Democratic side ($6 million in donations) and hedge fund investor Ken Griffin on behalf of Republicans ($18.5 million). Because super PACs are prohibited from coordinating directly with candidates according to federal election rules, the groups place their own ad buys to boost their preferred candidates.
Further Reading:
Meet The Billionaires Funding The Battle For Control Of The House Of Representatives (Forbes)
With midterms weeks away, candidates and their backers are spending more ad dollars (NPR)
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Sara Dorn, Forbes Staff
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Kristen McDonald Rivet let out a big, slightly rueful laugh. “I was underestimating the level of national attention this race was going to get,” she told me. “In the extreme, I was underestimating it.”
A city commissioner in Bay City, Michigan, McDonald Rivet decided earlier this year to run as a Democrat for the State Senate. She knew the race would be competitive in a closely divided district. But she had little inkling that the seat she was seeking would come to be regarded by Democratic operatives as one of the most crucial in the country.
Thousands of people run for state legislatures every two years, and many of the campaigns are important but sleepy affairs that hinge on debates over tax rates, school funding, and the condition of roads and bridges. Not this year, however, and not in Michigan. With Republican election deniers running up and down the ballot in key battlegrounds, many Democrats believe that the fight for power in state capitals this fall could ultimately determine the outcome of the presidential election in 2024.
Democrats have carried Michigan in seven of the past eight presidential elections, but they have not held the majority in its State Senate for nearly 40 years. This year, however, they need to pick up just three seats to dislodge Republicans from the majority, and a new legislative map drawn by an independent redistricting commission has given Democrats an opportunity even in a year in which the overall political environment is likely to be challenging for the party.
If Michigan is famously shaped like a mitten, the Thirty-Fifth District sits between its thumb and forefinger, encompassing the tri-cities of Saginaw, Bay City, and Midland near the shores of Lake Huron. The area voted narrowly for Joe Biden in 2020, but Mariah Hill, the caucus director for the Michigan Senate Democrats, told me she considers it the party’s “majority-making seat.”
McDonald Rivet won her election as a commissioner in Bay City with about 350 votes; this year, in her first run for a partisan office, she told me she had raised about $425,000, which is a considerable sum for a state legislative candidate. National groups such as EMILY’s List, the States Project, and EveryDistrict are directing money and resources to her campaign.
Progressives have been intensifying their focus on state legislative power over the past decade. In the 2010 GOP wave, Republicans caught Democrats flat-footed, swept them from majorities across the country in 2010, and then locked in their advantage for years to come through gerrymandering in many states. Democrats reclaimed seven state legislative chambers in 2018, but their momentum slowed in 2020, when they failed to pick up a single chamber. They also lost the majorities they had gained in New Hampshire.
In an earlier era of U.S. history, battles for control of state legislatures took on national importance as proxy fights for power in Washington. Before the ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment in 1913, state legislatures—not voters—appointed U.S. senators. In modern times, however, state legislatures are frequently overlooked relative to their influence on policies that most directly affect voters’ lives. Donors shell out hundreds of millions of dollars to sway presidential and congressional elections. But while gridlock often consumes Capitol Hill, state capitals are hives of legislative activity by comparison.
The urgency behind the Democratic push to win back legislative chambers escalated in the run-up to 2020, when the party knew that the majorities elected that year would be tasked with drawing legislative and congressional maps after the decennial census. But it might be even greater now. The Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade in June allowed states to severely restrict or altogether ban abortion, instantly raising the stakes of legislative races across the country.
Another potential Supreme Court decision has spiked Democratic fears to a new level. The justices in the term that begins this month will hear arguments in Moore v. Harper, an election-law case that legal experts say could dramatically reshape how ballots are cast and counted across the country. Republican litigants want the high court to affirm what’s known as the independent-state-legislature theory, which posits that the Constitution gives near-universal power over the running of federal elections to state legislatures. A ruling adopting that argument—and four conservative justices have signaled that they are open to such an interpretation—would allow partisan legislative majorities to ignore or overrule state courts and election officials, potentially granting legal legitimacy to efforts by Donald Trump’s allies to overturn the will of voters in 2024.
With the next presidential election in mind, Democrats have prioritized gubernatorial elections in the closely fought states, including Michigan, Arizona, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Georgia, where Trump tried to jawbone legislators and other high-ranking officials into overturning his defeat in 2020. They’ve also steered donations to long-neglected secretary-of-state races in some of those same battlegrounds. But the looming Supreme Court ruling in Moore v. Harper has, for some Democrats, turned the fight for state legislative control into the most pivotal of all. “A single state legislative race in Michigan or Arizona could well prove more important to our future than any congressional or U.S. Senate race in America,” Daniel Squadron, a co-founder of the States Project, told me.
Squadron’s group is spending $60 million to back Democrats in state legislative races in just five states, in what it is calling the largest investment by a single outside organization ever for those campaigns. The effort is in part designed to counter what has historically been a significant GOP advantage, led by the Republican State Leadership Committee and major conservative donors, such as the Koch family.
Precisely how realistic the States Project’s goals are, and where Democrats should be spending most heavily, is a source of some debate within the party. In Arizona, a swing of just more than 1,000 votes in the State House and 2,000 votes in the State Senate would have flipped those chambers to Democrats in 2020, and the party needs to pick up only one or two seats this year to win majorities. But Arizona’s maps became more favorable to Republicans in redistricting, and the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee—the party’s official state legislative arm—views winning majorities there as a relative long shot, especially during a difficult midterm year in which Democrats typically lose seats. The DLCC is instead more focused on protecting Democratic incumbents in Arizona and defending the party’s narrow advantages in states like Colorado and Nevada. Jessica Post, the committee’s president, acknowledges that there is a “philosophical difference” between the DLCC and some of the outside progressive groups.
“We think that the playing field is wider than simply flipping three battleground states,” Post told me. “We think that we have to protect Democratic majorities across the country.” The States Project is also investing in a few states where Democrats narrowly control the legislature, including Maine and Nevada. But Squadron defended the decision to play offense elsewhere, noting that swaying state legislative races costs “a fraction” of what it does to influence statewide and national elections. “It’s necessary,” he said. “The stakes are high enough that whether the odds are low, medium, or high, we have to take this on.”
There is widespread agreement, including among Republicans, that the Michigan State Senate is in play, and that the race in the Thirty-Fifth District could be decisive. “There’s no question things are tight right now,” Gustavo Portela, the deputy chief of staff for the Michigan Republican Party, told me. GOP candidates are focusing their campaigns heavily on inflation, he said, though he noted that the new maps tilt toward Democrats and that Republicans currently lag them in fundraising.
Campaigns and outside groups are running TV ads in some districts, but the candidate who wins a state legislative race tends to be the one who knocks on the most doors. McDonald Rivet is facing a Republican state representative, Annette Glenn, who supported Trump and called for a “forensic audit” of the 2020 election in Michigan, which Joe Biden won by more than 150,000 votes. (Her campaign did not respond to requests for comment.)
With an army of about 100 volunteers, McDonald Rivet told me her team has already knocked on more than 30,000 doors. Many of the people who answer cite worries about kitchen-table economic issues, or schools, or health care, or abortion—the topics you’d expect voters to bring up. But a surprising number, McDonald Rivet said, express unprompted concern about the future of American democracy, about whether election results will be respected. “I often hear people say, ‘I never thought I would question the health of democracy,’” she said. “‘These are things I have taken for granted my entire life.’”
Protecting democracy is just one of the many issues McDonald Rivet highlights when she talks with voters, either at their homes or during the small meet-and-greet events she holds in the district. But she, too, is worried. Michigan Republicans have nominated election deniers for both governor and secretary of state. McDonald Rivet told me that some Republican candidates for the state legislature have stated publicly that the only electoral outcome they would accept in 2024 is a Trump victory.
When I asked Portela whether a Republican legislative majority would honor the result of the popular vote for president, he twice dodged the question. “That’s nothing but fear-mongering from Democrats who are desperate,” he replied. “That’s not what’s at stake right now.” Perhaps he’s right. But to Democrats, it’s the evasiveness, the refusal to affirm a fundamental tenet of American elections, that suggests they are right to worry.
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Russell Berman
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It might be nice one day to wake up and feel serene—even hopeful—about the state of American politics. To know that all of those people who have been warning about the growing threat to democracy are way ahead of their skis. But today is not that day.
Arizona Republicans are nominating an entire cast of characters who argue not only that Donald Trump won the election in 2020, but also that the state’s results should be decertified—a process for which there is no legal basis. These Trump-endorsed candidates—Kari Lake for governor, Mark Finchem for secretary of state, Abraham Hamadeh for attorney general, Blake Masters for senator—all won their respective primaries this week and are now one election away from political power.
Some strategists might frame these Republican wins as a gift to Democrats, and you can look at it that way. Democrats will be more competitive in the upcoming midterms than they might have been if more reasonable Republicans were on the ballot. Moderates and independents abound in Arizona, and they aren’t going to be excited to vote for a passel of kooks. But that doesn’t change the simple fact that the fundamentals are on Republicans’ side this year: Joe Biden is still unpopular; inflation is still high; America might soon be entering a recession.
“Nobody should be popping champagne,” Sarah Longwell, a Republican strategist and the publisher of The Bulwark, told me. “This is the most antidemocracy slate of candidates in the country. We’re in a very dangerous situation.”
“Stop the Steal” candidates are running—and winning—all over the country. But Arizona concentrates a lot of them within a single geographic area—like an ant farm of election deniers.
Lake might prove the most significant of these candidates. Lake’s lead over her top Republican opponent, Karrin Taylor Robson, had grown to nearly 3 percent when the gubernatorial primary race was finally called in her favor on Thursday night. Before becoming an enthusiastic proponent of Trump’s election lies, Lake was a local TV-news anchor, making her a household name in Arizona and giving her something that many political candidates lack: confidence in front of the camera. Like Trump, Lake has a difficult-to-describe magnetism with Republican-base voters; they simply cannot get enough of her.
Throughout her campaign, Lake has called Biden an “illegitimate president” and vowed that, if she becomes governor, she’ll be reviewing and decertifying Arizona’s 2020 election results—despite multiple audits (and even a partisan review) showing precisely zero evidence of widespread fraud. Even ahead of the primary, Lake claimed to have evidence of funny business; the NBC reporter Vaughn Hillyard tried to get Lake to share some of that evidence, but she would not. Lake and Finchem, the cowboy-hat-wearing would-be secretary of state whom I profiled last month, have been cooking up new ways supposedly to prevent fraud—by banning voting machines and early voting. Both Lake and Finchem primed voters to believe that, if they lost, only fraud would explain their losses. Of course they did. That’s the new Republican playbook, and these two know it better than anyone.
Lake’s opponent in November, Katie Hobbs, is Arizona’s former secretary of state and a run-of-the-mill Democrat who will probably try to position herself as the sane, competent foil to Lake’s wild-eyed conspiracy monger. That’s a solid strategy—maybe the only one that can work. But Hobbs is so run-of-the-mill that she’s boring. And what Hobbs lacks in personality, she makes up for in baggage, after a former staffer successfully sued last year over discrimination. For Arizonans who are still fans of democracy, though, Hobbs is the obvious choice—an apt example of the “Terrible Candidate/Important Election” scenario that my colleague Caitlin Flanagan described this week.
Arizona Democrats like Hobbs do have a genuine shot at defeating this slate of extremists. The basic fact of these Republicans’ extremism makes all Democratic candidates look better by comparison. Many independent voters, who count for something like one-third of all Arizona voters, and moderate Republicans would probably have happily voted for any Republican but Lake; come November, some of them may be willing to turn that into any candidate but Lake. Plus, Democrats seem to have gotten their groove back in recent weeks. Lawmakers in Washington, D.C., reached a long-elusive deal on sweeping climate legislation; gas prices are dropping fast; and the overturning of Roe v. Wade might energize an otherwise sleepy set of Democratic voters just in time for the midterms.
And yet. Despite what hopeful Democrats might tell you, Arizona isn’t a purple state; it’s more of a lightish red. And this year remains an excellent year for Republicans—probably the best chance for any Republican extremist to make it into elected office not just in Arizona, but anywhere in the country. “When the political party in power has a president running in the mid- or upper 30s and inflation is high and people are feeling recession-y?” Longwell said. “You’re in a danger point. You just are.”
The danger of a Lake or Finchem election in November is pretty straightforward, as I’ve outlined in previous stories. State leaders can easily cast doubt on an election’s results if the outcome doesn’t suit them, and this entire slate of Arizona Republicans is clearly prepared to do that. Governors and secretaries of state can tinker with election procedures or propose absurd new requirements, such as having every voter reregister to vote, as the Republican gubernatorial nominee in Pennsylvania, Doug Mastriano, has suggested. What happens if the outcome of the 2024 presidential election comes down to a closely divided Arizona? What if such a pivotal state was run not by Democrats and Republicans who are loyal to the democratic process, but by conspiracy-drunk partisans who won’t stop until they see their candidate swearing on a Bible? There’s a reason Trump has endorsed this slate; he knows these candidates will be pulling for him no matter what.
Maybe the most important thing to note is that whatever happens to these Trump sycophants in November, they’ve demonstrated that a not-insignificant number of Republican voters want them—the cream of the conspiracy crop—to lead their party. In Tuesday’s primary, Rusty Bowers, Arizona’s Republican speaker of the house who did not cooperate with attempts to overturn the 2020 election results, lost his State Senate race to an election denier. Lake, who has become a household name in Trumpworld and raked in campaign donations from across the country, will be well positioned, whatever the coming election result, to be a MAGA superstar.
If you’re still tallying up Trump’s primary wins and losses as an indicator of his grip on the party, you’re missing the point. The man’s enduring legacy is figures like Lake and a GOP packed with cranks and conspiracy theorists. “They will be defining the next generation of Republicans, and [Lake] will be among the next generation of leaders,” Longwell said. “If she wins, or even if she loses.”
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Elaine Godfrey
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Candidate for Perris Elementary School Board has broken all the rules in his quest to salvage local schools
Press Release
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updated: Nov 1, 2018
PERRIS, Calif., November 1, 2018 (Newswire.com)
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Too few political campaigns at any level, for any office, offer the unique combination of credentials that can be found in the small community of the Perris Elementary School District in southern California. Unlike the majority of those who will be seeking political offices next week, occasionally there is one whose qualifications are tailor-made to fit the job description. Even more rarely do the education, experience and lifelong commitment reflect the values and circumstance of his constituency. Almost never does a candidate subordinate rhetoric to a specific plan for identifying the root causes of specific problems and offer step-by-step milestones on a Road Map to specific solutions.
In a tiny, tight-knit, educational system of something less than 6,000 students, Dr. Norman Quintero has addressed fundamental issues behind, and real solutions to, an underperforming PESD. Previously, he has addressed the fundamentals of accountability, resource allocation, absenteeism, increased revenues and after-school programs with a focus on tutorials, recreational activities and social development. Dr. Quintero believes that a school board should support its dedicated teachers and involve its kids’ parents in order to motivate and educate its students.
“Almost 20 years ago, ‘No child left behind’ was a federal program that sounded good but accomplished little. I am committed to reviving those ideals on a local level. Now that I have received the endorsements from the general public of both major political parties, I will reach out to parents and teachers as well. I am confident that together we can provide individual attention and individual opportunity to every one of our individual students. That is our challenge and our obligation” Dr. Norman Quintero
Dr. Norman Quintero, Candidate for Perris Elementary School Board, District 5
Dr. Quintero shares a common culture and background with local families. With a student body to whom English is a second language and whose nutrition is almost entirely subsidized by governmental agencies, he understands and appreciates the value of a responsive public education system in creating students’ successes.
As a professional educator, counselor and mental health expert, he has devoted his life and career to improving lives. As a social advocate and successful businessman, he has achieved a proven talent for the management, and maximizing the efficiency of, limited budgets.
As the father of eight children, he fully understands that every child is born with individual challenges, talents and potential – their success in life requires a coordinated effort, on a daily basis, among teachers, parents, administrators and the students themselves. “Every child” certainly includes those who are entitled to a systemic accommodation for “special education” and “special needs.”
In publishing his fifth of six Road Map landmarks, the candidate has stated, “Almost 20 years ago, ‘No child left behind’ was a federal program that sounded good, but accomplished little. I am committed to reviving those ideals on a local level. Now that I have received the endorsements from the general public of both major political parties, I will reach out to parents and teachers as well. I am confident that together we can provide individual attention and individual opportunity to every one of our individual students. That is our challenge and our obligation.”
Source: Dr. Norman Quintero
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