Across the 10 states included in Transparency USA’s database, several prominent women dominated donor lists in the 2020 election cycle. Some, like Karla Jurvetson and Deborah Simon, targeted key state-level elections across multiple swing states. Others focused their contributions closer to home, supporting candidates and PACs in their state of residence. While Transparency USA focuses on state-level campaign finance, all of these women have supported federal candidates and causes as well. See those contributions here.
Hays County Democratic Party
Texas Committee
$23,336Cash on Hand
$44,948Total Contributions
$44,163Total Expenditures
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$3,000.00 | Gilbert Fulmer |
$1,960.50 | Dale and Libby Linebarger |
$1,960.50 | Dixie Camp |
$1,478.81 | Sharon Reed-Miller |
$1,100.00 | Peter Sprouse |
$1,056.00 | Aggregated Unitemized Contributions |
$1,025.00 | Fay Cliett Gillham |
$1,000.00 | Lloyd Doggett |
$1,000.00 | Lloyd Doggett Campaign |
$960.50 | Diane Shaktman |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$3,496.00 | Texas Democratic Party |
$2,500.50 | Texas Old Town |
$2,400.00 | Lupe Carbajal |
$2,330.75 | Office Depot Inc |
$2,299.62 | Century Link Employee PAC |
$2,154.37 | ACE Printing |
$2,000.00 | Elaine Cardenas Campaign |
$2,000.00 | Erin Zwiener |
$2,000.00 | Ruben Becerra Campaign |
$2,000.00 | Steven Kling |
Related Articles
On June 5, voters in Fort Worth elected Mattie Parker, former chief of staff to Mayor Betsy Price, to replace outgoing Price as the city’s top elected official. In a runoff election that saw over 88,000 voters cast ballots, Parker took 54 percent of the votes to win this expensive and closely-watched contest against Deborah Peoples, former Democratic Party chair for Tarrant County.
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.