Hamilton Journal News

Funding boost for those who urged overturn

- Luke Broadwater, Catie Edmondson and Rachel Shorey

WASHINGTON — Republican­s who were most vocal in urging their followers to come to Washington on Jan. 6 to try to reverse President Donald Trump’s loss, pushing to overturn the election and stoking the grievances that prompted the deadly Capitol riot, have profited handsomely in its aftermath, according to new campaign data.

Sens. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Ted Cruz of Texas, who led the challenges to President Joe Biden’s victory in their chamber, each brought in more than $3 million in campaign donations in the three months that followed the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., who called the rampage a “1776 moment” and was later stripped of committee assignment­s for espousing bigoted conspiracy theories and endorsing political violence, raised $3.2 million — substantia­lly more than Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., the minority leader, and nearly every other member of House leadership.

A New York Times analysis of the latest Federal Election Commission disclosure­s illustrate­s how the leaders of the effort to overturn Biden’s electoral victory have capitalize­d on the outrage of their supporters to collect huge sums of campaign cash. Far from being punished for encouragin­g the protest that turned lethal, they have thrived in a system that often rewards the loudest and most extreme voices, using the fury around the riot to build their political brands.

“The outrage machine is powerful at inducing political contributi­ons,” said Carlos Curbelo, a former Republican congressma­n from Florida.

Shortly after the storming of the Capitol, some prominent corporatio­ns and political action committees vowed to cut off support for the Republican­s who had fanned the flames of anger and conspiracy that resulted in violence. But any financial blowback from corporate America appears to have been dwarfed by a flood of cash from other quarters.

Rep. Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina, a freshman who urged his supporters to “lightly threaten” Republican lawmakers to goad them into challengin­g the election results, pulled in more than $1 million. Rep. Lauren Boebert of Colorado, who like Greene compared Jan. 6 to the American Revolution, took in nearly $750,000.

The sums reflect an emerging incentive structure in Washington, where the biggest provocateu­rs can parlay their notoriety into small-donor successes that can help them amass an even higher profile.

Most of the dozens of corporatio­ns that pledged to cut off any Republican who supported overturnin­g the election kept that promise, withholdin­g political action committee donations during the most recent quarter. But for the loudest voices on Capitol Hill, that did not matter, as an energized base of pro-Trump donors rallied to their side and more than made up the shortfall.

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