'How far will Republicans go?' Democrats expect GOP will target key campaign tool
Republicans are zeroing in on a key element of the Democratic Party's financial infrastructure with scrutiny into alleged wrongdoing.
Three Republicans in Congress, including the chairmen of the House Oversight and Administration committees, are urging Donald Trump's Treasury Department to hand over reports of allegedly suspicious financial transactions related to the liberal fundraising platform ActBlue, which GOP lawmakers say has violated campaign finance laws or aided terrorist organizations, reported CNN.
“House Oversight is pulling back the curtain on ActBlue’s shady operations. Anyone with a shred of common sense would find it curious that obscure candidates are stumbling into millions of dollars overnight,” said Rep. Nick Langworthy (R-NY), who co-signed a letter to treasury secretary Scott Bessent seeking the records. “There is a trail of breadcrumbs a mile long that suggests fraud and evasion of campaign finance laws — and the days of the Biden administration stonewalling our investigation are over."
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Trump's billionaire benefactor Elon Musk, who heads up his controversial DOGE team shrinking the federal government, has amplified allegations of ActBlue wrongdoing and claims without evidence that prominent Democrats, including one who died in 2019, were funding protests and vandalism against his electric-vehicle company Tesla.
“Something stinks about ActBlue,” Musk posted earlier this month on his social media platform, X.
Officials with ActBlue deny any wrongdoing and say the allegations were politically motivated attacks.
“ActBlue has always dealt with attacks and baseless claims from the Right that are designed to undermine the power of the small-dollar donors who rely on our platform,” spokesperson Megan Hughes said in a statement in CNN. “This new, coordinated attack is different only in scale, and our team remains steadfast in defending against these bad-faith attacks.”
The nonprofit organization helps funnel small-dollar donations to candidates, party committees and other entities and has so far collected more than $16 billion since its founding in 2004, and despite facing intra-party criticism about whether the platform is doing enough to protect donors from deceptive tactics, some Democrats fear Republicans feel emboldened to try and shut it down entirely.
“I think Republicans know that ActBlue has been an extremely effective fundraising platform for thousands of Democratic campaigns and progressive groups,” said Josh Nelson, the CEO of the ad platform Civic Shout. “They’re just trying to use power to harm their political opponents in future elections.”
Nelson signed an open letter last year recommending changes to ActBlue’s policies to protect donors, but he said those concerns have taken a back seat over his fears about illegitimate attacks” by the GOP.
“The question is how far will Republicans go?” he added.
GOP lawmakers are seeking executive branch investigations and access to sensitive Treasury Department documents, such as the “suspicious activity reports,” or SARs, that financial institutions file to flag suspected cases of money laundering, fraud or other suspicious transactions, and Democrats are using those attacks to solicit donations.
“Republicans are attacking ActBlue because small-dollar donations from people like you are a major advantage for Democratic campaigns up-and-down the ballot,” read a recent fundraising email from the Democratic National Committee.