In the 2022 election cycle, donors have already begun kicking in campaign cash to their preferred Wisconsin candidates and causes, with one Madison doctor leading the pack among the state’s top donors.
Alison Page
$1,763,335Total Contributions
$1,342,113Total Expenditures
Are you Alison Page, or someone associated with
their campaign?
Learn about the benefits of claiming your page -
it's free.
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions | Name |
---|---|
$1,355,736.30 | Assembly Democratic Camp Comm - Seg Fund |
$133,325.19 | Democratic Party of Wisconsin - Seg Fund |
$2,950.00 | Pierce Co Democratic Party |
$2,187.61 | Alison Page |
$2,000.00 | Diana Strassmann |
$2,000.00 | James Shelton |
$2,000.00 | John W Miller |
$2,000.00 | Jonathan Eder |
$2,000.00 | Prescott Bergh |
$2,000.00 | SEIU Wisconsin State Council PAC |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
---|---|
$1,187,816.23 | Assembly Democratic Camp Comm - Seg Fund |
$129,825.19 | Democratic Party of Wisconsin - Seg Fund |
$7,940.17 | Agency Strategies |
$5,625.31 | Budget Signs and Specialties |
$4,822.96 | Actblue Wisconsin |
$2,187.61 | Page Alison |
$1,118.13 | Democracy Engine LLC |
$1,049.00 | United States Postal Service |
$500.00 | Rebecca Cooke for Congress |
$500.00 | Tom Nelson Campaign |
Related Articles
The For the People Act of 2021—known as H.R. 1 in the House and S.1 in the Senate—was introduced in the US House on January 4 as a primary concern of the Biden administration, and passed in the U.S. House on March 3rd.
The stakes were particularly high for the 2020 elections, and not just for the presidency. At the state-level, some of the most closely watched races were Democratic efforts to flip swing state legislatures blue and take control of the upcoming redistricting process.