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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2009
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Campaign Finance

Started by R McCartney; Last updated by D Lim

Campaign Finance

Beyond the poll numbers is an ongoing race to raise money

The 2008 Presidential Election is turning out to be the most expensive race in American history. Although it's not a top issue on anyone's platform, campaign finance is a driving force in almost every presidential hopeful's run for election. Bank balances are mentioned in the same breath as poll numbers and many candidates have dropped out for lack of funds in what FEC Chairman Michael Toner predicts will be a "$1 billion election."

Stories

Stories 61 - 80 of 143

  • July 2008
    • Spitzer 2010 Was Billed for Tryst Hotel

      Spitzer 2010 Was Billed for Tryst Hotel

      (Newser) - Eliot Spitzer's filings for his now-defunct 2010 reelection campaign, released yesterday, included two payments to the Mayflower Hotel in Washington—the site of his infamous trysts with call girls, the New York Times reports. Though it's unclear whether Spitzer himself stayed there, and if so on what nights, misuse of public campaign money is one of the potential charges the former New York governor could face for his participation in a prostitution ring. More »

    • McCain Backers Finding Ways Around Law He Sponsored

      McCain Backers Finding Ways Around Law He Sponsored

      (Newser) - Desperate to keep up with Barack Obama's powerful fundraising apparatus, John McCain’s allies have found ways of skirting the very campaign finance laws the Arizona senator helped write, the Wall Street Journal reports. Republican strategists are pushing donations toward a fund used to elect governors—not subject to dollar limits—on the theory that state-level pushes will boost the top of the ticket. More »

    • Rising New Money Class Powers Obama

      Rising New Money Class Powers Obama

      (Newser) - Barack Obama likes to tout his small-donor network, as though a wave of inspired regular folk came out of the woodwork just for him. In reality, Obama is mining a money class that Democrats have been cultivating for years, writes David Brooks in the New York Times —"the rising class of information age analysts." More »

  • June 2008
    • Barack Writes Campaign Check to Hillary

      Barack Writes Campaign Check to Hillary

      (Newser) - Barack Obama made a personal $4,600 donation to Hillary Clinton's campaign—a gesture to win over her supporters as the Democratic party tries to unify following the divisive campaign for the nomination. Obama told a meeting of 200 top Clinton fundraisers he's encouraging his donors to help pay off Clinton's $20 million campaign debt. "I'm going to need Hillary by my side campaigning during his election, and I'm going to need you," Obama said. More »

    • Justices Nix 'Millionaire's Amendment' for Campaigns

      Justices Nix 'Millionaire's Amendment' for Campaigns

      (Newser) - The Supreme Court today voided the “millionaire’s amendment,” ruling by 5-4 that the law—which raised donation limits for candidates who face wealthy, self-financed opponents—violates the First Amendment, the AP reports. The majority said it would have been a different story if all candidates saw their limits raised. Notably, Barack Obama (in his Senate primary) may be the biggest beneficiary of the 2002 law to date. More »

    • McCain, Obama Raise $21M Each

      McCain, Obama Raise $21M Each

      (Newser) - John McCain nearly matched Barack Obama’s fundraising intake last month, granting the presumptive Republican presidential nominee “a level of parity that would have been unimaginable just a few months ago,” MSNBC says. McCain scored $21.5 million while Obama, whose fundraising slumped to its lowest levels of the year, pulled in $21.9 million. More »

    • MoveOn Axes Big-Money Fundraising Arm

      MoveOn Axes Big-Money Fundraising Arm

      (Newser) - One day after Barack Obama became the first candidate since Watergate to reject general election public financing, a prominent liberal grassroots group has disbanded its 527 operation. "We, like Senator Obama, believe that this election can be won by ordinary Americans giving small donations,” MoveOn said in a statement. This cuts MoveOn off from labor, foundation and big-donor money, Talking Points Memo reports. More »

    • Forget the Small-Donor Myth: Big Money Still Rules

      Forget the Small-Donor Myth: Big Money Still Rules

      (Newser) - Barack Obama often talks about how much money he’s raised from small donors, even describing it as “a parallel public financing system.” But while Obama has indeed raised record sums from little guys, big donors have kept pace , writes Jay Mandle of the Washington Post, predicting that when the dust settles, their 2008 role will have increased, rather than decreased. Through March, he notes, Obama's small-donor percentage was actually smaller than John Kerry's.  More »

    • Obama's a Pragmatist, Not a Reformer

      Obama's a Pragmatist, Not a Reformer

      (Newser) - Barack Obama’s decision to opt out of the public financing system shouldn’t come as a surprise, writes Politico’s Ben Smith. Obama has been inching away from the money for a long time now, proving once again that he’s not a traditional reformer—he’s a pragmatist. Obama comes from a community organizing tradition that focuses on results, not methods. More »

    • Death Knell Tolls for Campaign Finance

      Death Knell Tolls for Campaign Finance

      (Newser) - Barack Obama's decision to forgo public financing for his presidential campaign represents the biggest challenge yet to the troubled, loophole-filled system. But while the Illinois senator is now poised to spend a record amount to win the presidency, the explosion of  Internet donations that have propelled his campaign might actually be more successful at offsetting the power of special interests, writes the New York Times . More »

    • McCain Blasts Obama for Declining Funds

      McCain Blasts Obama for Declining Funds

      (Newser) - Following fast on Barack Obama’s decision to abandon public financing, a McCain rep said the Dem has failed “the true test of a candidate”—whether he'll stick to his word, Time reports. But Politico notes that an Obama rep blamed McCain: “Our campaign counsels met, and it was immediately clear that McCain’s campaign had no interest in the possibility of an agreement.” More »

    • Obama Opts Out of Public Financing

      Obama Opts Out of Public Financing

      (Newser) - Barack Obama has opted out of public financing in the general election, the AP reports, reversing a joint pledge made last year with John McCain to spend only the $84 million in taxpayer cash between the party conventions and Election Day. While McCain appears set to accept public financing, Obama has since proved a fundraising juggernaut—and has long hinted he’d stick with private cash. More »

    • Short On Cash, Democrats Trim Convention

      Short On Cash, Democrats Trim Convention

      (Newser) - Democrats are scaling back their national convention plans in the face of fundraising shortfalls, the AP reports. The Denver host committee has just $29 million of the $40.6 million it promised to deliver by yesterday. The committee says it’s confident it’ll get the money before the convention begins Aug. 25, but organizers are shaving $3 million off events and vendor obligations. More »

    • Giuliani Will Stump for GOP, for a Price

      Giuliani Will Stump for GOP, for a Price

      (Newser) - Rudy Giuliani has offered to appear at fundraisers for cash-strapped Republican candidates but with strings attached, the New York Times reports. The former New York mayor wants a cut of the proceeds to go towards paying off his presidential campaign's $3.6-million debt. The debt includes a $500,000 personal loan from Giuliani, who is worth an estimated $30 million. More »

    • Campaign Debt? What Campaign Debt?

      Campaign Debt? What Campaign Debt?

      (Newser) - Some clever and mostly legal accounting tricks could minimize Clinton's big campaign debt and leave her with cash on hand for king-making or another future campaign, reports Politico. Hillary could reclassify her own loans to the campaign as contributions, ask donors to redirect their cash to her Senate campaign, and take it slow on repaying understanding debtors. More »

    • Hillary's Next Challenge: Paying Bills

      Hillary's Next Challenge: Paying Bills

      (Newser) - Hillary Clinton's White House bid made history—by ending with what is believed to be the largest presidential campaign debt ever. The New York senator had approximately $9.5 million in unpaid bills at the end of April, not to mention $11.4 of her own money that she lent the campaign. The Clinton campaign is still adding up the final tally, but her options for retiring her debt are limited. More »

    • Party Conventions: the Last Loophole for Big Donors

      Party Conventions: the Last Loophole for Big Donors

      (Newser) - Big donors are pumping big money into both party's conventions, one of the last remaining loopholes in the rules governing so-called soft money contributions, the New York Times reports. And while it's all perfectly legal, the issue may test the conviction of both Barack Obama and John McCain on their desire to eliminate the influence of deep-pocketed contributors. More »

    • Dems Work to Fuse Fundraising Machines

      Dems Work to Fuse Fundraising Machines

      (Newser) - The Obama and Clinton campaigns have been working to merge their fundraising machines as Clinton prepares her swan song today, the Wall Street Journal reports. Clinton made a call to her top 50 fundraisers, urging them to get behind Obama and promising a private meeting with the presumed nominee. The combined operation could create a juggernaut capable of dwarfing the contents of John McCain's offers. More »

    • Obama Wallet Strikes Fear in GOP Hearts

      Obama Wallet Strikes Fear in GOP Hearts

      (Newser) - Republicans not used to worrying about money are sweating pennies, given John McCain's relatively inept fundraising in the face of an unprecedented Democratic war chest. Barack Obama, by conservative estimates, will have $300 million to McCain’s federal cap of $85 million for the general-election campaign, Politico reports—and with that kind of money, Obama could force McCain to play defense in traditionally red states. More »

    • Obama Willing to Help Bail Clinton Out of $20M Debt

      Obama Willing to Help Bail Clinton Out of $20M Debt

      (Newser) - Barack Obama might ask his supporters to help Hillary Clinton pay off her campaign debt, Bloomberg reports. Clinton has accrued more than $20 million, $11.4 million of which she personally contributed. Under a campaign-finance law (co-sponsored by John McCain) she has until August's Democratic convention to raise money to settle the debt, after which she can only recoup $250,000. More »

Stories 61 - 80 of 143

01-07-07_2124
01-07-07_2124   ((c) VirtualErn)
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Fred Thompson Supports McCain/Feingold Campaign Finance   (springfield3100 (YouTube))
Rudy Giuliani on campaign finance reform   (giulianirecord (YouTube))
Romney on Campaign Finance Reform   (GovMittRomney (YouTube))

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Background

Wikipedia Entry for Campaign Finance
Wikipedia

Campaign finance refers to the means by which money is raised for election campaigns. As campaigns have many expenditures, ranging from the cost of travel for the candidate and others to the purchasing of air time for TV advertisements, candidates often spend a great deal of time and effort raising...

» Read more about Wikipedia Entry for Campaign Finance at Wikipedia

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