In Texas, state-level candidates and PACs have spent $2.68 million from their campaign accounts on services from Facebook in the 2022 election cycle so far. Facebook received 0.59 percent of all reported expenditures.
Texas Organizing Project Political Action Committee
Texas Committee
$1,097,360Cash on Hand
$2,368,216Total Contributions
$2,111,364Total Expenditures
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$850,000.00 | George Soros |
$328,000.00 | TOP Political Action Committee (DISSOLVED) |
$200,000.00 | Eva Grove |
$200,000.00 | Eva Kasten |
$125,000.00 | Justice and Public Safety PAC - Federal |
$100,000.00 | Elizabeth Simons |
$50,000.00 | Lee & Amy Fikes |
$40,750.00 | Margery Loeb |
$40,000.00 | Marcie Musser |
$40,000.00 | Rachel Gelman |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$903,040.61 | Texas Tool Belt LLC |
$329,431.50 | TOP Political Action Committee (DISSOLVED) |
$301,584.67 | Texas Organizing Project Education Fund |
$44,000.00 | Katz Compliance |
$31,500.76 | Monarch Printing Company Inc |
$26,826.29 | Alamo Mailing Company |
$26,000.00 | Human Age Digital |
$20,000.00 | Texas Democratic Party |
$19,313.38 | Prestige Printing LLC |
$19,054.31 | Molly Mitchell |
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This article is Part 4 of a four-part series demonstrating how the money in a lobby sector can impact state politics and legislation. Read the first three articles here, here, and here.
On May 1, voters in Lubbock passed Proposition A, a local ordinance that designated the city as a “sanctuary for the unborn,” with 62 percent of voters voting in favor. The election, which made Lubbock the largest city in the United States to establish such a designation, attracted heavy campaign spending by both sides as the trail to Election Day heated up.