Nov 18, 2020 · Published by Erin Duffin , Nov 18, 2020. This statistic illustrates the amount donated to U.S. political parties during the 2020 election cycle, by organization. As of October 15, 2020, shipping ...
In the 2021 - 2022 election cycle, an individual may give: $2,900* to each candidate or candidate committee per election; $5,000 to each political action committee (PAC) 1; a combined total of $10,000 to state, district & local party committtees per calendar year; $36,500* to national party committees per calendar year;
A campaign may not accept more than $100 in cash from a particular source with respect to any campaign for nomination for election, or election to federal office. $50 limit on anonymous contributions: An anonymous contribution of cash is limited to $50.
Female Donors giving $200+ only to candidates/parties: 793,452: $891,126,238: $381,618,086: $506,187,680: Male Donors giving $200+ only to candidates/parties: 1,190,031: $1,631,750,052: $639,653,744: $984,264,816: Female Donors giving $200+ only to PACs: 94,195: $103,859,313.00: N/A: N/A: Male Donors giving $200+ only to PACs: 232,200: $316,082,682.00: N/A: N/A
In the 2021 - 2022 election cycle, an authorized campaign committee may give:
In the 2021 - 2022 election cycle, a PAC (not multicandidate) may give:
In the 2021 - 2022 election cycle, a state, district or local party committee may give:
In the 2021 - 2022 election cycle, a national-level party committee may give:
If a candidate accepts contributions for the general election before the primary is held and loses the primary (or does not otherwise participate in the general election), the candidate’s principal campaign committee must refund, redesignate or reattribute the general election contributions within 60 days of the primary or the date that the candidate publicly withdraws from the primary race.
Under the Federal Election Campaign Act (the Act), contributions are subject to limits. This page examines the rules concerning the limits placed on contributions to a candidate’s campaign. The limits apply to all types of contributions (except contributions made from a candidate’s personal funds ).
The general election is not held because the candidate received a majority of votes in the previous election. The date on which the election would have been held is considered the date of the election. The campaign must file pre-election reports and, in the case of a general election, a post-election report.
How limits work. The limits on contributions to candidates apply separately to each federal election in which the candidate participates. A primary election, general election, runoff election and special election are each considered a separate election with a separate limit.
The primary election period ends on the date that the candidate accepts the nomination of the party.
An undesignated contribution made on or before election day counts against the donor’s limit for that election, even if the date of receipt is after election day and even if the campaign has no net debts outstanding. On the other hand, an undesignated contribution made after an election counts against the donor’s limit for the candidate’s next election.
Even when independent and non-major party candidates are not involved in an actual primary, they are entitled to a primary limit. They may choose one of the following dates to be their “primary” date, and, until that date, they may collect contributions that count towards the contributor’s primary limits.
Almost 100,000 women donors have given to a presidential candidate in the 2020 presidential elections — nearly four times the number at this point in 2016.
The Center for Responsive Politics is pleased to announce the publication of “Race, Gender, and Money in Politics: Campaign Finance and Federal Candidates in the 2018 Midterms.”
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