Times-Call (Longmont)

Trump’s donation plea could complicate GOP fundraisin­g

- BY JILL COLVIN ASSOCIATED PRESS

ORLANDO, Fla. — “Trump needs you,” one fundraisin­g email implored.

“President Trump’s Legacy is in your hands,” another pleaded.

Others adver tised “Miss Me Yet?” T-shir ts featuring Donald Trump’s smiling face.

While some Republican­s grapple with how fiercely to embrace the former president, the organizati­ons charged with raising money for the party are going all in. The Republican National Committee and the party’s congressio­nal campaign arms are eager to cash in on Trump’s lure with small donors ahead of next year’s midterm elections, when the GOP hopes to regain control of at least one chamber of Congress.

But there’s a problem: Trump himself. In his first speech since leaving of fice, the former president encouraged loyalists to give directly to him, essentiall­y bypassing the traditiona­l groups that raise money for GOP candidates.

“There’s only one way to contribute to our ef for ts to elect ‘America First’ Republican conser vatives and, in turn, to make America great again,” Trump said Sunday at the annual Conser vative Political Action Conference in Orlando, Florida. “And that’s through Save America PAC and donaldjtru­mp.com.”

The comment was particular­ly notable because Trump is generally loath to ask for money in person. It amounts to the latest salvo in the battle to shape the future of the GOP, with Trump making clear that he holds no allegiance to the par ty’s traditiona­l fundraisin­g operation as he tries to consolidat­e power.

That could help him add to an already commanding war chest, aiding his ef for t to influence the par ty. Save America has more than $80 million cash on hand, including $3 million raised after the CPAC speech, according to a person familiar with the total.

Some of that money could help Trump settle scores with incumbent members of Congress who have crossed him. In his Sunday speech, Trump read aloud the names of ever y Republican who voted against him and called for them to be defeated. He’s already endorsed a Republican challenger to GOP Rep. Anthony Gonzalez of Ohio, who voted to impeach him over the U.S. Capitol riot.

“Trump’s call to give directly to him shows that the normal organs of the party ... are going to have to fight for relevance in the 2022 cycle,” said Dan Eberhar t, a longtime Republican donor who has given large sums to all three as well as to Trump’s campaign.

Bill Palatucci, a RNC member from New Jersey, called Trump’s comments “unwelcome” and “counterpro­ductive” and voiced concern that the GOP would suffer further losses, like Georgia’ Senate runoff elections in Januar y, if they don’t work together.

“Listen it’s a free countr y. Anybody can form a federal PAC or a super PAC and there’s always lots of competitio­n for dollars. But the crossing the line there is then to also tell people to not give to the impor tant committees of the national par ty,” said Palatucci. “There’s got to be a willingnes­s on the former president to look beyond his own self-interest.”

The RNC and spokespeop­le for the House and Senate campaign committees declined to comment. But others sought to downplay the apparent tensions. They noted, for instance, that Trump is scheduled to speak at the RNC’S spring donor retreat — a major fundraisin­g source — in April in Palm Beach.

And Trump told the party’s chair, Ronna Mcdaniel, in recent days that he wants to continue fundraisin­g for the RNC, according to a person briefed on the conversati­on who, like others, spoke on condition of anonymity to disclose private conversati­ons.

Before making his money pitch on Sunday, Trump’s team quietly updated its fundraisin­g filings. They conver ted his Save America leadership PAC to an entity that can also suppor t other candidates, and turned his main Donald J. Trump for President

campaign committee into the Make America Great Again, or MAGAPAC. Money raised through Trump’s website now goes to Save America JFC, a joint fundraisin­g agreement between the two.

While Trump left office as a deeply unpopular figure, he remains a powerful draw for small-dollar, grassroots donors, a reality that has been abundantly clear in fundraisin­g appeals over the last week.

Over the course of a single hour last Thursday, the RNC, both GOP congressio­nal campaign committees and the Republican State Leadership Committee, which tries to elect Republican­s to state of fice, blasted suppor ters with urgent fundraisin­g appeals that included urgent references to Trump.

And the National Republican Senatorial Committee warned this week that its “limited edition” T-shir ts featuring Trump were almost sold out.

Regardless of Trump’s next move, the GOP is unlikely to remove him from its sales pitch anytime soon.

“Our digital fundraisin­g strategy is simple: raise as much money as possible,” said Andrew Romeo, a spokesman for the RSLC.

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Getty Images ?? Supporters of former President Donald Trump demonstrat­e outside as first lady Jill Biden and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona tour Fort Leboeuf Middle School in Waterford, Pa., on Wednesday.
Mandel Ngan / Getty Images Supporters of former President Donald Trump demonstrat­e outside as first lady Jill Biden and Education Secretary Miguel Cardona tour Fort Leboeuf Middle School in Waterford, Pa., on Wednesday.
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