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Pop-up super PACs flood Georgia Senate runoff: It s about the big message
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Pop-up super PACs flood Georgia runoff: It s about the big message
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Super PACs, billionaire donors, out-of-state interest groups flood Georgia Senate runoffs Barnini Chakraborty
Political heavyweights, high-dollar donors, and special interest groups all have Georgia on their minds.
They have pivoted from the presidential election and zeroed in on a pair of U.S. Senate runoff races that could make or break President-elect Joe Biden s first term.
Some experts believe upward of $500 million will be spent in the nine weeks between the Nov. 3 general election and the Jan. 5 runoff races.
Already, negative ad wars have soared past the $450 million mark and saturated the airwaves with three more weeks to go before the big day.
Super PACs, billionaire donors, and out-of-state interest groups flood Georgia Senate runoffs Print this article
Political heavyweights, high-dollar donors, and special interest groups all have Georgia on their minds.
They have pivoted from the presidential election and zeroed in on a pair of U.S. Senate runoff races that could make or break President-elect Joe Biden s first term.
Some experts believe upward of $500 million will be spent in the nine weeks between the Nov. 3 general election and the Jan. 5 runoff races.
Already, negative ad wars have soared past the $450 million mark and saturated the airwaves with three more weeks to go before the big day.
JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images This story is available exclusively to Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.
Two lawmakers demanded that the FBI and the Federal Election Commission open an investigation into whether the Trump campaign violated federal law by spending hundreds of millions of reelection money through a company that White House advisor Jared Kushner created.
The lawmakers letter comes hours after Insider reported that the Trump campaign had spent $617 million through a company that the president s son-in-law helped establish in 2018.
In the letter obtained exclusively by Insider, Reps. Ted Lieu of California and Kathleen Rice of New York noted that campaign finance violations above $25,000 are felonies punishable by up to five years in prison.
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