The floodgates of Texas political giving are about to reopen on June 21 and they will not close again while the Texas Legislature convenes for upcoming special sessions.
Manish Seth
$307Cash on Hand
$107,248Total Contributions
$70,058Total Expenditures
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Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$20,000.00 | Texans for Lawsuit Reform PAC |
$15,000.00 | Ash Seth |
$13,300.73 | Greg Abbott |
$9,000.00 | Apurva Parikh |
$5,000.00 | Alex Meglar |
$5,000.00 | Javier Rodriguez |
$3,000.00 | Daniel DiLella |
$2,000.00 | Gustavo Suarez |
$2,000.00 | Jeremy Gutierrez |
$1,500.00 | Savant Energy |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$15,745.30 | Lawson Strategies LLC |
$14,423.17 | Sr3 Creative |
$7,256.83 | Rush Tshirt Printing |
$6,500.00 | Absolutely Focus Media LLC |
$4,860.00 | Catherine Pagel Consulting |
$2,500.75 | La Escondida Mexican Restaurant |
$2,500.00 | Aubrey R Taylor Communications |
$1,640.32 | NBD Graphics |
$1,511.45 | University Liquors & Fine Wines |
$1,000.00 | Jetton & Gojara LLC |
Related Articles
In session and out, lobbying is by far the biggest source of money in Texas politics. Taxpayers foot a sizable chunk of the bill, accounting for as much as $110 million (over 16 percent of the total reported lobbying money) during the 2020 election cycle time period. Another $70,429,959 (also around 16 percent of the total) has spent using taxpayer dollars in the 2021 so far.
A recent AP article questioned why several Democratic presidential candidates were spending $60 — or as much as $90, according to some campaigns — to raise one dollar. Yes, you read that right. Many Democratic presidential candidates have been spending millions on social media advertising to collect contributions as small as one dollar per donor. Surely, they’re not that bad at math.