NEW YORK — Donald Trump has devoted much of his campaign to railing against a corrupt system where politicians must answer to their donors — and to promising his supporters that he will break that mold.
But on the issue of outside money and funding in the general election, what Trump says and what his campaign does isn’t quite matching up. As more super PACs continue to emerge in support of his general election bid, both campaign and candidate have offered conflicting viewpoints.
The candidate won’t definitively rule out super PAC funding, instead suggesting that he doesn’t want it for himself, but for the Republican Party.
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Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, on the other hand, is still ruling out the big-money groups entirely. “We don’t have Super PACs,” he told NBC News.
But when pressed about the two specific groups vying for the Trump stamp of approval, Committee for American Sovereignty and Great American PAC, Lewandowski wouldn’t comment.
That silence is a change from the campaign’s previous efforts to actively shut down super PACs attempting to support the campaign. In the month of April alone the campaign filed three complaints to the FEC disavowing a trio of unofficial super PACs backing Trump.
But even with the Trump campaign staying silent on the latest outside money groups backing the candidate, it’s unclear whether either one has the legitimacy to be effective.
Major donors and fundraisers tell NBC News they’re unlikely to contribute to the groups, with one operative calling them “a running joke” among the GOP’s donor class. And the competition between the two runs the risk of splitting the available donor pool and leaving each group ill-prepared to respond to the expected onslaught of millions in attacks from a handful of well-established Democratic super PACs.
Pushing forward
Despite those challenges, however, both groups are pushing forward with their plans.
Doug Watts, Executive Director of the Committee For American Sovereignty and a former spokesman for Ben Carson’s campaign, acknowledged to NBC News that the late start puts them at a disadvantage — but argued the group will still be able to rake in millions.
“In the end, does it mean you won’t have raised as much money as if you had started a year earlier? Probably,” Watts said.
“This isn’t going to be easy — but it isn’t going to be that hard,” he added, pointing to a “boiling” landscape from donors who have largely been “sitting on their hands” this election.
That, he says, means “pent up demand.” And Watts predicts more action from pro-Clinton super PACs, like Priorities USA, will act as “an incentive to get going” for donors who are still on the sidelines.
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The group, he said, is on track to raise $20 million before the convention, with “a couple million” already banked and an overall goal of $100 million for the cycle.
And Watts insists competing with Great America PAC for donor dollars isn’t a concern: “I don’t look at it as a competitive environment,” he said.
But the co-chair of that rival group, Great America PAC, does see a problem.
“Multiple organizations confuse donors and build in inefficiencies,” Eric Beach, Great America PAC’s co-chair, told NBC News.
His group plans to raise and spend more than $100 million by Election Day, putting the group on a clear collision course with Watts’. And in a conference call with donors on Wednesday, Great America PAC co-chair Ed Rollins (joined on the call by former Cruz-backer turned Trump endorser, Rick Perry), said that they “are playing catch up to match those resources” already amassed by pro-Clinton super PACs.
But they already have a clear advantage over CFAS — Great America PAC launched earlier, has already spent seven figures supporting Trump’s bid, Beach said, and is planning a gathering for major GOP donors at oil magnate T. Boone Pickens’ ranch early next month.
The battle over funding aside, however, the groups have near-identical goals: To help Trump win in a handful of key battleground states to ensure he takes the 270 Electoral College votes needed to nab the White House.
Rollins said in the conference call Great America PAC will target seven or eight battleground states, including Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania. “We win those states,” he said.
Watts said CFAS is “holding their fire for now” but will look to set up strategic voter registration and get-out-the-vote programs as they see polling in to-be-determined battleground states develop.
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