USA TODAY US Edition

Republican outside groups raise $31.6M

Organizati­ons linked to McConnell set record

- Fredreka Schouten

Allies focused on Senate set mark for non-election-year contributi­ons

WASHINGTON – The leading outside groups working to retain the Republican Party’s grip on the Senate in November’s midterm elections raised $31.6 million last year — a record amount for the organizati­ons in a nonelectio­n year, according to figures provided first to USA TODAY.

The Senate Leadership Fund, One Nation and two other political organizati­ons associated with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., started this year with $23.9 million in cash reserves, a 10% increase from its cash position at this point in the last election cycle, officials said.

Republican­s have a favorable election map this year because they are defending just eight seats in the Senate compared with 26 held by Democrats. But they also face the crosscurre­nts of a polarizing President Trump and a long history of any president’s party losing seats in midterms.

Steven Law, who oversees the McConnell groups, said Republican donors understand that “the Senate majority represents a critical firewall if we run into trouble this fall” and are providing a steady stream of campaign cash to keep races competitiv­e.

“We start this cycle better prepared than we ever have been,” he said.

The strong fundraisin­g picture comes after months of Republican tumult. Former White House aide Stephen Bannon waged a fiery campaign to upend the party’s establishm­ent by winning over donors, backing insurgent candidates in Senate primaries and promising to take down McConnell.

Bannon’s efforts failed last month in deep-red Alabama, where Doug Jones beat Bannon-backed Republican Roy Moore to become the first Democrat elected to the Senate from the state in 25 years.

Then, Bannon was dumped by President Trump and other allies this month after Bannon’s sharp criticism of Trump’s family members became public in an explosive White House tell-all book by journalist Michael Wolff.

McConnell and his allies have gloated openly about Bannon’s public downfall and insist he did not pose a serious threat to the Republican­s in power.

“Contrary to the brief and loud boasts of one Mr. Stephen K. Bannon, our donors were never especially attracted to his rhetoric and nor were they anything but supportive of our mission,” Law told USA TODAY.

Some donors are “disappoint­ed” that Republican­s have failed to fully repeal the 2010 Affordable Care Act, a longstandi­ng GOP goal, Law said.

But he said contributo­rs to the McConnell groups view the Senate’s top Republican as “indispensa­ble” to advancing their agenda, including reshaping the federal judiciary.

Last year, the Senate confirmed 12 Trump nominees to the influentia­l appeals courts that are the last stop before the Supreme Court. That’s a record number for a first-year president.

A little more than half the money taken in by the McConnell-aligned groups — or $16.7 million — went to One Nation, a politicall­y active non-profit that does not disclose donor identities.

The Senate Leadership Fund, a super-PAC that does disclose donor informatio­n and details of its spending to federal election regulators, raised $13.7 million. Smaller amounts went to American Crossroads and Crossroads GPS, organizati­ons founded with help from Karl Rove, a top strategist for President George W. Bush. Rove remains involved in the McConnell groups.

“Contrary to the brief and loud boasts of one Mr. Stephen K. Bannon, our donors were never especially attracted to his rhetoric.” Steven Law

 ?? SHAWN THEW/EPA-EFE ?? Groups associated with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have broken fundraisin­g records.
SHAWN THEW/EPA-EFE Groups associated with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have broken fundraisin­g records.

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