Campaign Finance: After four decades of court decisions lifting restrictions on campaign spending, Americans are going to the polls this year in the most expensive presidential campaign in U.S. history, financed mainly by a handful of wealthy individuals and business and labor groups. Public outrage over the big spending fuels some of the popularity of GOP billionaire Donald Trump's largely self-financed campaign and that of Democratic Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who is supported mostly by small individual donors. But money did not help the top spender in the Republican presidential primaries: Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush abandoned his well-financed candidacy amid weak voter support. Conversely, Sanders has run an unexpectedly strong campaign against deep-pocketed former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Stymied by GOP congressional opposition and partisan gridlock on the Federal Election Commission, opponents of big-dollar politics are successfully pushing some states and cities to rein in election spending. But advocates of less regulation say limiting money in politics infringes on free speech.
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Thursday, January 31, 2019
Saturday, January 26, 2019
Pump Up the Vacuum!
NEW: @realdonaldtrump’s biz has abruptly begun firing its longtime undocumented workers. 12 fired @ just 1 golf club https://t.co/yvpCiFZrh0
— David Fahrenthold (@Fahrenthold) January 26, 2019
3 weeks
In 21 days President @realDonaldTrump is moving forward building the wall with or without the Democrats. The only outstanding question is whether the Democrats want something or nothing https://t.co/dMaDfBOIuT— Sarah Sanders (@PressSec) January 26, 2019
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