Campaigns · 117th Congress
Congressional fundraising climate favors Democrats
Outside political spending already topped more than $1 billion through early October, according to a tabulation by the watchdog group OpenSecrets.
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Outside political spending already topped more than $1 billion through early October, according to a tabulation by the watchdog group OpenSecrets.
The AP called those races at 1:41 a.m. Eastern time. No other candidate broke 7 percent, and the other third and fourth winners had not been called early Wedensday.
But all but $380,000 in Cheney’s contributions came from outside Wyoming, compared to almost $1 million of in-state donations for Hageman.
Corrected 1:05 p.m. | The president’s party usually loses seats in midterm elections, and those losses can be significant when the president is unpopular and the economy is in turmoil.
Murkowski held more than $5 million in her campaign as of March 31, while Tshibaka had slightly less than $1 million.
Dave Schatz raised $1.1 million with a $1 million loan and had $2.1 million on hand. Former Gov.
Here are four takeaways from the latest fundraising reports: 1. Vulnerable Democrats widen cash gap Sens.
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[jwp-video n=”1″] Scott has said he supports McConnell as his party’s leader in the Senate and he also spoke last week with Trump about winning Senate races in 2022.
Ron Johnson is up for reelection, by less than 1 point. Johnson, who voted Saturday to acquit Trump, has not yet said whether he will run for a third term.
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[jwp-video n=”1″] Midterms tough for president’s party Historically, Republicans could face a more difficult midterm election if Trump wins reelection, as voters grow tired or skeptical of the
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He raised $1 million and had $31,000 on hand on July 29.
[jwp-video n=”1″] The supporters Three GOP senators in races that