The Arizona Republic

GOP’s fundraisin­g spurs infighting

Finger-pointing obscures a deeper dilemma

- Brian Slodysko and Aaron Kessler

WASHINGTON – Trailing badly in his Arizona Senate race as votes poured in, Republican Blake Masters went on Tucker Carlson’s Fox News program and assigned blame to one person: Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.

“You know what else is incompeten­t, Tucker? The establishm­ent. The people who control the purse strings,” Masters said before accusing the long-serving GOP leader and the super PAC aligned with him of not spending enough on TV advertisin­g. “Had he chosen to spend money in Arizona, this race would be over. We’d be celebratin­g a Senate majority right now.”

Masters not only lost his race against Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly, but he also trailed every other Republican running for statewide office in Arizona. There’s another problem Masters didn’t acknowledg­e: He failed to raise significan­t money on his own.

He was hardly alone.

As both parties sift through the results of Democrats’ stronger-than-expected showing in the midterm elections, Republican­s are engaged in a round of finger-pointing, including a failed attempt by Florida Sen. Rick Scott, who led the Senate GOP’s campaign arm, to challenge McConnell for his leadership post.

But the recriminat­ions obscure a much deeper dilemma for the party. Many of their nominees – a significan­t number of whom were first-time candidates who adopted far-right positions – failed to raise the money needed to mount competitiv­e campaigns. That forced party leaders, particular­ly in the Senate, to make hard choices and triage resources to races where they thought they had the best chance at winning, often paying exorbitant rates to TV stations that, by law, would have been required to sell the same advertisin­g time to candidates for far less.

The lackluster fundraisin­g allowed Democrats to get their message out to voters early and unchalleng­ed, while GOP contenders lacked the resources to do the same.

“This has become an existentia­l and systemic problem for our party, and it’s something that needs to get addressed if we hope to be competitiv­e,” said Steven Law, a former McConnell chief of staff who now leads Senate Leadership Fund, a super PAC that spent at least $232 million on advertisin­g to elect Republican­s to the Senate this year.

“Our (donors) have grown increasing­ly alarmed that they are being put in the position of subsidizin­g weak fundraisin­g performanc­es by candidates in critical races. And something has got to give. It’s just not sustainabl­e,” Law said.

In key Senate and House battlegrou­nds, Democratic candidates outraised their Republican counterpar­ts by a factor of nearly 2-to-1, according to an Associated Press analysis of campaign finance data.

Consider the handful of races that helped Democrats retain their Senate majority.

In Arizona, Masters was outraised nearly 8-to-1 by Kelly, who poured at least $32 million into TV advertisin­g from August until Election Day, records show. Masters spent a little over $3 million on advertisin­g during the same period after Senate Leadership Fund pulled out of the race.

Meanwhile, in Nevada, Democratic Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto raised $52.8 million compared to Republican Adam Laxalt’s $15.5 million. And in Pennsylvan­ia, Democratic Sen.-elect John Fetterman took in $16 million more than his GOP opponent, Dr. Mehmet Oz. That’s despite the celebrity TV doctor lending $22 million to his campaign, records show.

Similar disparitie­s emerged in crucial House races, including in Nevada, Pennsylvan­ia and Virginia, helping limit House Republican­s to a surprising­ly narrow majority.

When it came to purchasing TV ad time, Democrats’ fundraisin­g advantage yielded considerab­le upside. Ad sellers are required by law to offer candidates the cheapest rate. That same advantage doesn’t apply to super PACs, which Republican candidates relied on to close their fundraisin­g gap – often at a premium.

In Las Vegas, for example, a candidate could buy a unit of TV advertisin­g for $598, according to advertisin­g figures provided to the AP. That same segment cost a super PAC $4,500. In North Carolina’s Raleigh-Durham media market, a $342 spot cost a super PAC $1,270. And a $580 candidate segment in the Philadelph­ia area cost a super PAC nearly $2,000, the advertisin­g figures show.

Republican­s also found themselves playing defense in states that weren’t ultimately competitiv­e.

JD Vance, who won his Ohio Senate race by more than 6 percentage points, was outraised nearly 4-to-1 by Democratic Rep. Tim Ryan. To shore him up, Senate Leadership Fund poured $28 million into the state. The group’s advertisin­g ultimately accounted for about 70% of all Republican media spending from August until Election Day.

A similar situation played out in North Carolina, where the McConnella­ligned super PAC was responsibl­e for 82% of the Republican advertisin­g spending during the same period. GOP Rep. Ted Budd won his Senate race by over 3% of the vote.

But money woes weren’t the only complicati­ng factor.

Donald Trump elevated a series of untested, first-time candidates. They included Masters, Vance and former NFL star Herschel Walker, whose complicate­d backstory includes threats of violence against his ex-wife, false claims of business success and allegation­s that he pressured two girlfriend­s to get abortions, which Walker denies. Then there was Oz, who moved to Pennsylvan­ia to seek the seat and also secured Trump’s endorsemen­t, but was pilloried by Democrats as an out-oftouch carpetbagg­er.

The former president gave them his endorsemen­t, but he was parsimonio­us when it came to sharing some of the more than $100 million he’s amassed in a committee designed to help other candidates.

He ended up spending about $15 million on ads across five Senate races, records show.

Meanwhile, the National Republican Senatorial Committee, led by Scott, often worked at cross-purposes with McConnell’s political operation.

Early on, Scott ruled out getting involved in primaries, which he saw as inappropri­ate meddling. McConnell’s allies, meanwhile, moved to fend off candidates they saw as poor general-election contenders, like Don Bolduc, a far-right conservati­ve who lost his New Hampshire Senate race by nearly 10 percentage points. McConnell forces also defended Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, a GOP moderate, against a conservati­ve challenger.

“Senate races are just different,” McConnell said in August. “Candidate quality has a lot to do with the outcome.”

In response, Scott took a shot at McConnell without mentioning him by name, suggesting in an opinion article published in the Washington Examiner that any “trash-talking” of Republican candidates was an “act of cowardice” that was “treasonous to the conservati­ve cause.”

But his committee also struggled after making a series of bad bets, including a costly investment to boost the committee’s online fundraisin­g.

An internal document obtained by the AP, which was previously reported by The New York Times, shows the committee invested $23.3 million to build out their digital fundraisin­g program between June and January of 2021. But the NRSC raised just $6.1 million during that time – a deficit. Then, as inflation soared, the stream of cash from online donors slowed to a trickle.

Chris Hartline, an NRSC spokespers­on, said the document showed a direct return from one part of the investment and did not reflect the total raised through the program, which he said topped more than $15 million, a figure that is still lower than what the committee put into the effort.

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