The Des Moines Register

Cash dash begins for congressio­nal candidates

- Brianne Pfannensti­el Brianne Pfannensti­el is the chief politics reporter for the Register. Reach her at bpfann@dmreg.com or 515-284-8244. Follow her on Twitter at @brianneDMR.

The money race has officially kicked off as Iowa’s congressio­nal candidates gear up for this year’s November election, filings with the Federal Election Commission show.

The reports, which cover fundraisin­g during the final three months of 2023, were released Jan. 31. They show Democrats in two of Iowa’s four districts raising money competitiv­ely alongside Republican­s as the party looks to claw back seats in Congress after ceding full control in 2022.

Democrats Christina Bohannan and Lanon Baccam raised more money during that time period than the sitting Republican incumbents they’re challengin­g, although the Republican­s still have amassed more money in the bank.

Bohannan, an Iowa City law professor and former state legislator, is running against Republican U.S. Rep. Mariannett­e Miller-Meeks in the 1st congressio­nal district. She raised about $652,000 compared to Miller-Meeks’ $475,000.

And Baccam, a veteran and former U.S. Department of Agricultur­e official, is challengin­g Republican U.S. Rep. Zach Nunn in the 3rd District. He raised about $507,000 compared to Nunn’s $426,000.

Democrat Melissa Vine, a nonprofit leader, has also announced she will run in the 3rd District. But Vine reported raising far less money: about $52,000.

Experts say they expect it will be difficult for Democrats to flip the seats.

Elections analysts at the Cook Political Report rate the 3rd District contest as “lean” Republican, saying the designatio­n means the race is considered competitiv­e, but Republican­s have an advantage.

Nunn won the district over Democratic incumbent Cindy Axne by a fraction of a percentage point in 2022.

Cook Political Report rates the 1st District race as a

“likely” Republican win, saying it is not considered competitiv­e at this point, but it has the potential to become so. This is the second time Bohannan has challenged Miller-Meeks. She lost the seat by about 7 percentage points in 2022.

Iowa’s U.S. Senators are not up for re-election this year.

Here’s a look at how much the candidates reported raising and spending during the final three months of 2023, plus how much they have in the bank going into this election year.

The tally does not include candidates who may have declared their intention to run but who have not raised enough money to require filing with the FEC.

1st Congressio­nal District

Mariannett­e Miller-Meeks (R, incumbent)

⬤ Raised: $475,223

⬤ Spent: $274,732

⬤ Cash an hand: $1,584,775 Christina Bohannan (D)

⬤ Raised: $652,231

⬤ Spent: $164,060

⬤ Cash an hand: $1,124,758

2nd Congressio­nal District

Ashley Hinson (R, incumbent)

⬤ Raised: $558,234

⬤ Spent: $428,357

⬤ Cash an hand: $1,440,946

⬤ Sarah Corkery (D)

⬤ Raised: $50,643

⬤ Spent: $14,641

⬤ Cash an hand: $36,002

3rd Congressio­nal District

⬤ Zach Nunn (R, incumbent)

⬤ Raised: $426,081

⬤ Spent: $234,140

⬤ Cash an hand: $1,594,585 Lanon Baccam (D)

⬤ Raised: $507,307

⬤ Spent: $62,786

⬤ Cash an hand: $444,520

⬤ Melissa Vine (D)

⬤ Raised: $52,674

⬤ Spent: $6,112

⬤ Cash an hand: $46,562

4th Congressio­nal District

Randy Feenstra (R, incumbent)

⬤ Raised: $600,986

⬤ Spent: $226,667

⬤ Cash an hand: $2,043,532

⬤ Ryan Melton (D)

⬤ Raised: $12,027

⬤ Spent: $8,428

⬤ Cash an hand: $10,636

 ?? PROVIDED BY MELISSA VINE FOR CONGRESS ?? Melissa Vine is running for Iowa’s 3rd Congressio­nal District seat.
PROVIDED BY MELISSA VINE FOR CONGRESS Melissa Vine is running for Iowa’s 3rd Congressio­nal District seat.
 ?? PROVIDED BY SARAH PRINEAS ?? Christina Bohannan is running for Iowa’s 1st Congressio­nal District.
PROVIDED BY SARAH PRINEAS Christina Bohannan is running for Iowa’s 1st Congressio­nal District.

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