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The Act established campaign spending limits for political parties in House general elections.It was the first federal law to require public disclosure of spending by political parties, but not candidates, by requiring national committees of political parties to file post-election reports on their contributions to individual candidates and their own expenditures.
The bill would amend the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 to provide for greater and faster public disclosure of campaign spending and to combat the use of "dark money" in U.S. elections (which increased from $69 million in 2008 to $310 million in 2012). [5]
White House Chief of Staff: Susie Wiles [1] January 20, 2025 White House Deputy Chief of Staff: Dan Scavino [2] Cora Alvi [3] White House Deputy Chief of Staff (Policy) Stephen Miller [4] White House Deputy Chief of Staff (Legislative, Political and Public Affairs) James Blair [5] White House Deputy Chief of Staff (Communications and Personnel ...
Campaign signs for U.S. Senate candidates, U.S. Rep. David Trone, D-6th, and Democratic Prince George's County Executive Angela Alsobrooks, are affixed to a wall prior to a straw poll in Cambridge ...
Returned to President Trump by Senate in January 2019, replaced by nomination of Alex Wong in February 2020 [89] Alternate Representative to the United Nations General Assembly Representative to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development: Pamela Bates September 2018 [90]
• Formally nominate Cabinet and sub-Cabinet officers and name many acting Cabinet officers, agency chiefs and commission chairs as Trump nominees await Senate confirmation. Health care • Repeal Biden directives intended to make it easier to enroll in Medicaid services, secure insurance coverage under the Affordable Care Act and lower ...
Smith is a former Marine and current lawyer. He narrowly lost the Republican nomination for Virginia Attorney General in 2021. He raised $556,762 since January 2022 for his campaign’s primary ...
In the context of the 2004 election cycle $50 multiplied by the approximately 120 million people who voted would have yielded about $6 billion in "public financing" compared to the approximate $4 billion spent in 2004 for all federal elections (House, Senate and Presidential races) combined. [17]