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Thursday, May 2, 2024

Campaign spending: Top Q2 political donation recipients in Kentucky

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These Kentucky political organizations received the most money from campaign donations in the second quarter of 2023, according to the Federal Election Commission.

Donations made to political groups or candidates must be disclosed under state law for greater transparency in elections. While Congress created the Federal Election Commission to oversee federal elections in 1974, each state is left to regulate its local elections. The Government Accountability Office reviews current campaign finance law and makes recommendations for keeping the laws relevant.

Campaigns must report to the FEC the purpose and payee of all disbursements over $200.

According to the OpenSecrets, the FEC increased contribution limits for the 2024 election cycle. Individual donors can give $3,300 per candidate per election, a $400 increase from $2,900 during the 2022 election cycle.

The contribution limit to national party committees jumped from $36,500 to $41,300 per year for the 2024 election cycle.

Top Q2 campaign contribution recipients
Campaign CommitteeCandidateAmountCity
Comer for CongressJames Comer$282,968Tompkinsville
Andy Barr for Congress, Inc.Garland Barr$251,281Lexington
Rand Paul for US Senate 2016Rand Paul$235,648Newport
Morgan McGarvey for CongressMorgan Mcgarvey$135,140Louisville
McConnell Senate CommitteeMitch McConnell$80,352Louisville
Guthrie for CongressBrett S. Guthrie$56,125Bowling Green
Hal Rogers for CongressHarold Rogers$26,550Somerset
Thomas Massie for CongressThomas H. Massie$12,012Newport
Booker for KentuckyCharles Booker$8,549Louisville
William Compton for CongressWilliam Dakota Compton$70Bowling Green
Yarmuth for CongressJohn A. Yarmuth$30Louisville

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