Fund-raising stalled, Republican
convention asks Adelson for donation
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[July 16, 2016]
By Daniel Trotta
CLEVELAND (Reuters) - A handful of donors
to the Republican National Convention have withdrawn pledges and
fund-raising has stalled during Donald Trump's polarizing bid for the
presidency, leading organizers to ask casino mogul Sheldon Adelson for
an urgent donation.
The Cleveland 2016 Host Committee said in a statement on Friday it had
approached Adelson, a generous party benefactor, while also
acknowledging its fund-raising has come to a virtual standstill, leaving
a $6 million shortfall.
"Negative publicity around our potential nominee resulted in a
considerable number of pledges backing out from their commitments," the
Host Committee said in a letter it sent to Adelson, according to the
political news website Politico, which said it had obtained the letter.
The Host Committee on Friday confirmed such a letter was sent to Adelson
and his wife, Miriam Adelson, but it downgraded the withdrawn pledges
from "considerable" to "a handful." It said the hastily sent original
letter "mischaracterized" the status of some donations. Some companies
identified in the letter as having backed out said on Friday they had
never made such pledges.
"Unfortunately, this letter (to Adelson) was not reviewed nor authorized
by the Host Committee chairpersons, and it mischaracterized certain
donations from individuals and corporations," the statement said.
"Some of what were referred to as pledges were actually expectations
based on pledges made to previous conventions, while a handful had been
withdrawn from the Host Committee for 2016 Republican National
Convention," it said.
The committee said it had apologized to the Adelsons' staff.
Host Committee officials on Friday declined to comment beyond the
official statement, leaving open the question of which donors reneged.
Donations will be disclosed after the convention in U.S. Federal
Election Commission filings.
The statement, from Host Committee Chief Executive David Gilbert, also
said the committee had raised $58.25 million to date, about $6 million
short of its goal of $64 million to cover expenses for the four-day
convention that starts Monday in Cleveland, where Trump is expected to
receive the Republican presidential nomination.
A month ago, a committee spokeswoman said $57.5 million had been raised.
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Gambling giant Las Vegas Sands Corp's Chief Executive Sheldon
Adelson speaks during an interview with Reuters in Macau, China
December 18, 2015. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu
The Politico report, citing the letter, said David Koch, like
Adelson a wealthy donor to conservative causes, and Coca-Cola
<COKE.O> each withdrew a pledge of $1 million. Koch and Coke
representatives told the Wall Street Journal they never made such
pledges. Coke previously said it donated $75,000 last year.
Visa, cited in the letter as having backed out of a $100,000 pledge,
said in a statement it never made a pledge.
FedEx <FDX.N> and BP <BP.L> were named in the letter as withdrawing
support but also told the Journal they had not made the stated
commitments.
Other marquee companies were also named but did not respond to
Reuters queries after business hours on Friday. Representatives for
the Adelsons could not immediately be reached for comment.
Last month activists disturbed by Trump's campaign and led by the
political arm of California-based advocacy group Color of Change
launched an effort to try to shame companies into dropping
sponsorships.
It was unclear if that effort, which targeted more than 30
companies, had an impact.
(Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Additional reporting by David Greising;
Editing by Andrew Hay)
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