Big money fails to stop Trump, again, prompting a donor reckoning
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[January 26, 2024]
By Alexandra Ulmer and Jason Lange
(Reuters) - From Wall Street to Silicon Valley, wealthy donors have
thrown tens of millions of dollars at Republican U.S. presidential
candidate Nikki Haley in an effort to keep Donald Trump from returning
to the White House.
They have learned a hard lesson: Big money can't win the Republican
presidential nomination -- at least not against Trump, who holds the
support of a wide majority of the party's voters.
Pro-Haley forces outspent the main outside group supporting the former
president's candidacy by more than two to one over the past year,
according to a Reuters analysis of campaign finance disclosures filed
with the Federal Election Commission.
The SFA Fund Inc, the main pro-Haley super PAC, has so far reported
spending more than $70 million backing her run over the last year, and a
super PAC affiliated with billionaire Charles Koch reported spending
around $40 million to support Haley or oppose Trump.
In contrast, the main pro-Trump super PAC, known as MAGA Inc, reported
spending about $50 million over the same period.
Despite that, Trump romped to two strong wins, first in Iowa on Jan. 15,
and then on Tuesday in New Hampshire.
While Haley has vowed to carry on, Trump has driven all of his other
rivals out of the race and has all but clinched the Republican
nomination to face Democratic incumbent Joe Biden in the November
general election.
In interviews with around a dozen donors and strategists who opposed
Trump, a feeling of powerlessness seeped through.
"Trump has a base that basically is impenetrable. I don't think money
was the issue at all," said metal magnate Andy Sabin.
Sabin himself is illustrative of some donors' frenzied quest for a Trump
opponent: At first, Sabin backed Florida Governor Ron DeSantis. Then,
put off by DeSantis' foreign policy stance, Sabin decided to back U.S.
Senator Tim Scott.
When Scott dropped out, Sabin chose to back Haley. After she lost New
Hampshire, however, Sabin said on Wednesday that the race was
effectively over.
The apparent failure of anti-Trump Republicans to stop him highlights
his popularity with his supporters, many of who dismiss the multiple
criminal prosecutions he faces as politically motivated. Trump says he
is innocent of all the charges.
The disempowering of wealthy donors is yet another way that Trump, who
is financially fueled by small contributions, has fundamentally remade
the Republican Party.
"The idea that any single entity can take checks and spend hundreds of
millions of dollars to impact a presidential campaign is just not a
21st-century reality," said Ed McMullen, a top fundraiser for Trump and
his former ambassador to Switzerland.
Trump's financial model was sparking imitators, McMullen said. "I'm
finding more candidates who are starting to focus more on a broader
donor base than a singular high-dollar donor base."
Hardline conservatives in the Republican-controlled House of
Representatives, for instance, already rely heavily on small campaign
donors.
The Trump and Haley campaigns did not respond to requests for comment.
'TOTAL DISCONNECT'
The disconnect between wealthy donors and Republican voters on the
ground is apparent.
Keith Rabois, a Miami-based venture capitalist backing Haley, in
December shared a graph on social media platform X showing her climb in
public opinion polls. "This is exactly what a successful startup's KPIs
look like," he wrote.
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Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald
Trump speaks during his New Hampshire presidential primary election
night watch party, in Nashua, New Hampshire, U.S., January 23, 2024.
REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo
Key Performance Indicator, which aims to gauge business performance,
is unlikely to be among the average Trump voter's - or average
American's - daily lexicon.
"Key Performance Indicator? I just chuckle," said Gary Leffler, a
general contractor who was a precinct captain supporting Trump in
Iowa and is known for driving a Trump-themed tractor to rallies.
"It's a classic mistake made by people who have money. They take
people out of the equation. It's a total disconnect," Leffler added
of the donor class. "They're not going to the grocery stores, to the
home improvement stores, they're not really connecting to people on
the street."
When asked about his comments and donors' role, Rabois said he never
believed "money matters" in politics, and said voters would again
reject Trump.
Another illustration of the apparent diminishing power of old-line
Republican money comes in Charles Koch, the fossil fuels magnate
whose family built Americans for Prosperity (AFP), one of the most
formidable U.S. conservative advocacy and donor networks.
While Americans for Prosperity Action's endorsement of Haley gave
her more money and momentum, their advertisements and door knocking
failed to convince enough voters. To be sure, AFP Action's 2024
strategy also involves congressional races, where it aims to prevent
Democrats from gaining seats.
COMING HOME TO TRUMP?
Reed Galen, a former Republican consultant who is raising money for
the anti-Trump Lincoln Project, said that donors might have had more
success if they had started spending against Trump a year earlier,
been relentless in their attacks, and benefited from stronger
candidates.
Still, he conceded: "I'm not sure even that would have worked."
Some donors who had previously bet against Trump have already begun
to support him.
Dan Eberhart, a prominent donor who previously supported DeSantis,
is now backing Trump, for example. And Sabin, the metals magnate,
said he would vote for Trump in November, although he said he
wouldn't give him a "nickel."
Several donors told Reuters that Trump's team had been calling to
try to get them on board, including in at least one case by enticing
them with the offer of a Trump meeting at his Mar-a-Lago resort in
Florida.
On Wednesday, Trump upped the ante, saying that anybody making a
contribution to Haley would be "permanently barred" from his
political orbit.
One Haley donor said he feared speaking out against Trump for fear
of getting on his bad side, adding, "That's dangerous."
Of course, Trump has long had some major, committed donors on his
side, including Home Depot billionaire Bernie Marcus, who told
Reuters he'd likely fund Trump even if the candidate is convicted.
George Glass, a major Trump campaign fundraiser and his former
ambassador to Portugal, said he expected "at least half" of donors
who backed a non-Trump candidate would return to the fold, adding,
"It's pretty much a unification behind President Trump."
(Writing by Alexandra Ulmer; Editing by Scott Malone and Jonathan
Oatis)
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