Smith County Republicans

Texas Committee

$12,506Cash on Hand
$34,616Total Contributions
$36,071Total Expenditures

Financial Activity

Top Contributors

Total Contributions
Name
Type
$2,160.00 Stuart Hene INDIVIDUAL
$2,020.00 Jarad Kent INDIVIDUAL
$1,937.50 Fritz Hager Jr INDIVIDUAL
$1,655.00 Randy And Denise Rives INDIVIDUAL
$1,535.00 Christina Drewry INDIVIDUAL
$1,500.00 Linebarger Goggan Blair & Sampson LLP ENTITY
$1,450.00 Jarad Kent INDIVIDUAL
$1,128.00 John Moore INDIVIDUAL
$800.00 Bryan Hughes INDIVIDUAL
$750.00 Collin Shull INDIVIDUAL
View All Contributors

Top Payees

Total Expenditures
Payee
Type
$7,620.54 Hollytree Country Club ENTITY
$5,363.00 Cantina Laredo ENTITY
$5,316.94 The Grove LLC ENTITY
$4,378.14 Subsplash Inc ENTITY
$2,853.32 Xpresso Print Cafe ENTITY
$1,404.86 Elisabeth Gentry INDIVIDUAL
$649.50 Par Five Golf ENTITY
$626.78 Subsplash Inc ENTITY
$600.00 Paladin Solutions ENTITY
$500.00 Daniel Alders Campaign INDIVIDUAL
View All Payees

Top Loans

There is no loan data available.

View All Loans

Related Articles

Transparency USA | 08/25/2021
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.
Transparency USA | 02/17/2021
As the 87th Texas legislative session resumes after a two week adjournment, efforts to ban taxpayer-funded (TPF) lobbying are back in the spotlight. Considered priority legislation by the Republican Party of Texas, bills were once again filed by State. Rep. Mayes Middleton (R—Wallisville) in the House, and State Sen. Bob Hall (R—Edgewood) in the Senate.
Transparency USA | 01/20/2021
Now that lawmakers have convened in Austin, private citizens and PACs are no longer able to make political contributions, so the sole financial influence on lawmakers during the legislative session comes from lobbyists. In fact, in session and out, lobbying is by far the biggest source of money in Texas politics — and taxpayers are footing the bill for a lot of it. This look at the City of Houston is the first installment in our series analyzing the top taxpayer-funded entities in Texas.