TRUMP FUNDRAISING SURGE: "Trump 47 took in $145 MILLION in the 3rd quarter of the year" - Theodore Schleifer, New York Times reporter. Trump's high-dollar fundraising group raises $145M, backed by key figures like Marc Andreessen and Dana White. #Trump2024 #Fundraising
FTC data: three crypto super PACs have spent $82M in 19 races, including $40M in Ohio and $10M in Arizona; the ads focus on candidates and rarely mention crypto (@jsscppr / Politico) https://t.co/G25CDk1zm4 📫 Subscribe: https://t.co/OyWeKSRpIM https://t.co/7DYVYqZE0d
"The nascent [cryptocurrency] industry has quietly become the single biggest outside spender in congressional elections this cycle other than traditional party groups, spending more than environmental PACs, pro-Israel advocates or abortion-rights groups." https://t.co/wcQrewCUpO

Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz, prominent Silicon Valley venture capitalists, have each donated $2.5 million to the pro-Donald Trump super PAC Right for America, according to recent Federal Election Commission filings. Andreessen also contributed approximately $844,000 to the GOP and Trump's campaign. Right for America raised $28 million over the summer, with key support from donors such as Ike Perlmutter. Trump's high-dollar fundraising group reported raising $145 million in the third quarter, bolstered by significant contributions from figures like Andreessen and UFC President Dana White. The tech sector, including leading investors, is increasingly contributing substantial sums to political action committees, influencing the political landscape. The cryptocurrency industry has also become a significant player in electoral spending, quietly becoming the largest outside spender in congressional elections after traditional party groups. Crypto super PACs have spent $82 million in 19 races, including $40 million in Ohio, often without mentioning crypto in their advertising.



