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In 2016, direct contributions (in this list) totaled $1,085,100; lobbying efforts (not in this list) totaled $3,188,000; and outside spending (not in this list) totaled $54,398,558. [ 5 ] [ 7 ] The issue of gun control has become increasingly important in American politics.
Diagram by the Sunlight Foundation depicting the American campaign finance system. The financing of electoral campaigns in the United States happens at the federal, state, and local levels by contributions from individuals, corporations, political action committees, and sometimes the government. Campaign spending has risen steadily at least ...
The Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) is a political nonprofit organization, not a political party. Therefore, DSA members and endorsees usually run as members of the Democratic Party, Green Party, Working Families Party, or as independents. [citation needed] In the 2017 elections, DSA members were elected to fifteen state and local ...
Media Matters for America [7] Center for Public Integrity [8] Priorities USA Action [9] American Bridge 21st Century [9] America Votes [9] [10] Millennium Promise [11] Tides Center and Foundation [12] Wikimedia Endowment [13] MoveOn [14] [15] America Coming Together [15]
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List of former Trump administration officials who endorsed Kamala Harris; List of Republicans who opposed the Donald Trump 2024 presidential campaign; List of Joe Biden 2024 presidential campaign primary endorsements; List of Kamala Harris 2024 presidential campaign endorsements; Endorsements in the 2024 Republican Party presidential primaries
In January 2021, a number of companies halted their political contributions in the United States, primarily in response to some Republican legislators' objections to certification of the 2021 United States Electoral College vote count and the ensuing mob that attacked the U.S. Capitol.
The Center for Responsive Politics was founded in 1983 by retired U.S. Senators Frank Church of Idaho, of the Democratic Party, and Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, of the Republican Party. [1] In the 1980s, Church and Scott launched a "money-in-politics" project, whose outcome consisted of large, printed books.