Republicans spend millions on TV ads for midterms, but why doesn't
Trump?
Send a link to a friend
[September 22, 2022]
By Jason Lange and Jarrett Renshaw
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Fundraising groups
tied to Republican Party leaders are sharply increasing spending on
campaign ads to help the party win control of Congress in the Nov. 8
general elections.
But not Donald Trump's Save America, a PAC fundraising group that under
U.S. election law can fund the Republican former president's political
allies and his frequent rallies but not any election campaign of his
own.
Despite amassing more than $90 million in the PAC - an unprecedented sum
for a former leader - Trump's group has yet to report any ad spending to
support Republican candidates, according to a disclosure filed to the
Federal Election Commission on Tuesday.
While Trump is not obliged to use Save America's cash pile on ads, his
failure to join the Republican spending spree is fueling speculation
that he is holding on to it to help fund a possible White House run in
2024, even though Save America by law would not be able to fund his
campaign.
A Save America spokesperson gave no indication that the PAC planned to
increase its spending like its Republican brethren and said the real
value lay not in the PAC's huge war chest but in Trump himself.
"His rallies, which serve as the most powerful political weapon in
American politics, bring out new voters and invaluable media attention
that propel candidates to victory," said Taylor Budowich, a spokesman
for Save America.
Republican and Democratic fundraising groups known as PACs and Super
PACs, which can spend unlimited sums helping campaigns as long as they
don't coordinate expenditures with candidates, have saturated the U.S.
airwaves in recent weeks with television ads, widely seen by both
parties as crucial communication tools.
The Republican Party's two Super PACs tied to its congressional leaders
and its two main congressional PACs have poured more than $105 million
into political ads since Aug. 20, according to a Reuters analysis of
their disclosures to the FEC. That's more than double what they reported
spending this year through Aug. 20.
To be sure, Trump's Save America PAC has spent money on the midterms:
close to $9 million on rallies with candidates where Trump has
repeatedly hinted he could run for president again; and a similar amount
on direct contributions to allied groups and the more than 200
candidates Trump has endorsed.
[to top of second column]
|
Former U.S. president Donald Trump holds
a rally in Youngstown, Ohio, U.S., September 17, 2022. REUTERS/Gaelen
Morse/File Photo/File Photo
But that has only made a small dent in Save America's war chest, and
some of the biggest spending in U.S. elections is on expensive
television ads to woo voters, especially in the final weeks before
Election Day.
FEDERAL PROBE
The New York Times reported earlier this month that a federal grand
jury in Washington was seeking information on the formation of - and
spending by - Save America. Officials have not confirmed the media
reports as grand juries typically operate in secret. Budowich
declined to comment on the reports.
During the first half of the year, Save America vacuumed in close to
a fifth of the funds raised through WinRed, the main Republican
online fundraising platform.
Save America regularly sends supporters emails proclaiming them
"Patriot of the Month" - or chiding them for not yet contributing.
For donors giving at least $45, some emails offer an "epic" t-shirt
emblazoned with dozens of photos of the former leader.
"Trump's PAC could be used to flood the zone with messages
supportive of pro-Trump Republican candidates, but with each passing
week, more and more voters have already made up their minds," said
Michael Beckell, research director at Issue One, a nonpartisan group
that advocates for campaign finance reform.
In the summer, Trump aides floated several Save America spending
plans calling for the organization to run ads in support of
candidates and provide staff in key elections clashes, according to
two people familiar with the plans but who requested anonymity
because they are not authorized to speak publicly.
At least one of the plans called for television commercials that
supported Trump-backed candidates but which would largely be about
Trump and his political movement, the two people said.
"I would not be surprised if they don't run one ad supporting a
candidate in the election cycle," said one of the people familiar
with Save America's planning.
(Reporting by Jason Lange and Jarrett Renshaw, Editing by Ross
Colvin and Alistair Bell)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |