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The Matt Gaetz-Marjorie Taylor Greene Fundraising Tour Is Actually a Cash Fire

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  tessylo  •  3 years ago  •  6 comments

By:   Roger Sollenberger, The Daily Beast

The Matt Gaetz-Marjorie Taylor Greene Fundraising Tour Is Actually a Cash Fire

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



The Matt Gaetz-Marjorie Taylor Greene Fundraising Tour Is Actually a Cash Fire












Roger Sollenberger

Thu, July 22, 2021, 5:05 AM











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Photo Illustration by The Daily Beast / Photos Getty

At the height of the   controversy surrounding   Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) and the revelations that he’s   under investigation for sex trafficking , Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) bet big on a nationwide joint fundraising tour with her   embattled colleague . But new campaign filings show that not only did the gamble not pay off, but that the much-maligned Republicans actually spent four times as much as they raised.

Greene,   the House GOP’s top fundraiser , is now faced with a decision: She can continue to join forces with her beleaguered ally at the expense of her campaign war chest, or she can cut bait and let Gaetz fend for himself.

Since Gaetz and Greene kicked off their joint fundraising committee with a   May 7 event at The Villages   in central Florida, their campaigns and joint fundraising committee have posted a combined loss of $342,000. And according to recent filings with the Federal Election Commission, that joint fundraising effort, “Put America First,” reported only $59,345.54 in contributions.

That sort of meager haul would be fine for a dinner or one-time event, but Gaetz and Greene have repeatedly held high-profile events and spent a whopping $287,036.19 to hold them—meaning they’re in the hole by more than $225,000.


Both Gaetz and Greene contributed $150,000 apiece from their own campaigns to the joint fundraising committee. And they’ve raised money almost entirely from small-dollar donors. Only four people gave $500 or more to the shared committee. But their campaign tour of some of the most Trump-friendly areas in the nation has been inordinately expensive.

In fact, the big winner from the Gaetz and Greene barnstorming appears to be Gaetz’s PR firm.

The Logan Circle Group, which the campaign hired in early April, made off with more than a million dollars in the second quarter of 2021. While the majority of that money came from Gaetz—$825,000 over the course of one month—the firm nudged past the million-dollar mark with the $250,000 it received from Put America First. Those payments, nearly 90 percent of the committee’s total budget, were for “event production and management,” according to FEC filings.

A Gaetz campaign spokesperson told The Daily Beast that all donations raised on the tour had gone to Put America First. Asked again if that was correct, the spokesperson said it was. Upon double-checking with the campaign’s finance team, the spokesperson would only say that, “Our filings speak for themselves.”

But if the filings speak for themselves, then they’re not saying many good things.

Individually, Gaetz and Greene raised $1.34 million and $1.31 million in the second quarter of 2021, respectively. Those totals are certainly impressive, and Gaetz and Greene   could   argue that the publicity from their circuit is helping them fundraise individually. Except, they’re not making that argument, and both candidates have actually raised less in this most recent quarter than they did in the first.

Matt Gaetz’s Wingman Paid Dozens of Young Women—and a 17-Year-Old

Gaetz slipped from $1.82 million in the first months of the year, his personal best. He also spent $1.95 million along the way, the majority of it on fundraising and a pricey public relations scramble to push back against reports about the investigation.

But Greene—whose campaign is easily the biggest money draw among the House GOP—plummeted, coming $1.9 million short of her eye-popping $3.2 million first-quarter haul. After expenses, including travel and   fundraising costs , she closed the second quarter with only a $300,000 net gain. She had ended the first quarter up $1.8 million.

A Gaetz spokesperson—who was not affiliated with the Logan Circle Group—defended the three-term congressman’s fundraising performance.

“Despite an endless stream of lies from the media, Congressman Gaetz continues to be among the most prodigious fundraisers in Congress and is the only Republican who doesn’t accept donations from federal lobbyists or PACs,” the spokesperson said in a text message. Gaetz, a three-term congressman representing a deep-red district in the Florida panhandle, hadn’t raised more than a million dollars in a quarter until October 2020.

“He thanks his tens of thousands of donors and promises to always fight for them,” this spokesperson added.

New Docs Show Matt Gaetz Campaign in Full Damage-Control Mode

Greene and Gaetz, arguably the two most controversial House Republicans, were united this spring by scandals that had not only alienated them from the mainstream, but left them isolated within their own party.

At the time, Gaetz was the focus of a string of   media reports   revealing   details   about   his role   in a   federal sex crimes investigation , which in addition to   the trafficking allegations   reportedly extends to a sweeping   public corruption probe .

Soon after   The   New York Times   broke the news of the investigation, Gaetz—a self-identifying “Florida man” who wears his loneliness among D.C. colleagues as a   badge of courage —found himself even further marooned politically. Only Greene and longtime ally Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) were willing to speak up in his defense.

“When I first got to Washington, the party leaders said ‘Gaetz, it seems to us you’re not really a team player,’ and I said ‘I am, but you’re not my team,’” Gaetz   told supporters   in his district the day before the   Times   story ran.

Greene, for her part, had just been bitten twice by her GOP colleagues. In February, House Republicans stripped the conspiracy theorist of her committees, and in April, she was forced to cancel her proposed “America First” caucus amid criticism for its   white nationalist rhetoric . Gaetz had signed on to the caucus, and the pair later applied the same moniker to their tour.

Two months in, however, their joint effort appears primarily concerned with fighting gravity. Venues have   canceled events   in response to public outcry, and after the launch at The Villages the media has largely ignored their whistle-stops.

But Greene, who has shown GOP leadership her value as a fundraising powerhouse, still apparently sees reason to go forward, at least according to the Gaetz campaign. A spokesperson for the Florida Republican told The Daily Beast that Greene had personally committed to future events benefiting the joint committee.

“Congressman Gaetz and Congresswoman Greene look forward to announcing new stops on the America First tour in the coming weeks,” the spokesperson said.

The Greene campaign did not reply to The Daily Beast’s request for comment.

Read more at The Daily Beast.









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Tessylo
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Tessylo    3 years ago

The pedophile/skank ho tour. . . 

 
 
 
Tessylo
Professor Principal
3  seeder  Tessylo    3 years ago

A second California venue refused to host Matt Gaetz' and Marjorie Taylor Greene's 'America First' tour

 
 
 
Tessylo
Professor Principal
4  seeder  Tessylo    3 years ago

A third California venue has nixed Matt Gaetz' and Marjorie Taylor Greene's 'America First' tour stop

 
 
 
Paula Bartholomew
Professor Participates
4.1  Paula Bartholomew  replied to  Tessylo @4    3 years ago

We don't want or need these two douche canoes here.  Let them go to Trump states to spew their bs.

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
5  Kavika     3 years ago

Karma.

 
 
 
Tessylo
Professor Principal
5.1  seeder  Tessylo  replied to  Kavika @5    3 years ago

I doubt they're even using their own money for their 'rallies'.

 
 

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