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The Club for Growth Action was the first third-party group to spend significant sums against Donald Trump. [164] The Club for Growth announced a $1.5 million advertising buy in Florida in March 2016. The group's advertisements highlighted Trump's support for liberal policies, such as a single-payer health insurance system and tax increases.
Club for Growth Action is an independent-expenditure only committee or Super PAC with a stated mission of "defeating big-government politicians and replacing them with pro-growth, limited government conservatives." [1] Club for Growth Action spends money running political advertising campaigns in congressional races throughout the country. [2]
Crow is a member of the founding committee of the Club for Growth and has served on the board of the American Enterprise Institute since 1996. [10] [11] [12] He has donated almost $5 million to Republican campaigns and conservative groups. Crow donated $500,000 toward publicity campaigns for President George W. Bush's nominees for the Supreme ...
Yass and Uihlein are both major GOP megadonors who have given to Club for Growth and other conservative groups for multiple election cycles. ... a group that boosts Democrats running for Congress ...
Win it Back PAC, a political group affiliated with Club for Growth Action, is launching a new ad targeting Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.), who’s running for the Senate in Arizona, on crime and ...
The influential conservative group Club for Growth launched a new ad in West Virginia on Wednesday targeting Gov. Jim Justice (R), who’s running to unseat Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.). “This is ...
He is a co-founder of two conservative political groups, The Federalist Society and The Club for Growth. [1] McIntosh was the Republican nominee for Governor of Indiana in 2000, losing to Democratic incumbent Frank O'Bannon. He was an unsuccessful candidate for the Republican nomination in Indiana's 5th congressional district in 2012.
[7] From 2003 to 2004, the Club for Growth was the single largest fundraiser for Republican House and Senate candidates, being outdone only by the Republican party itself. [6] In December 2004, the Club for Growth's board voted to remove Moore as president, with his opponents within the organization upset by his criticism of President George ...