As a rule, political fundraising letters are written in deliberately vague ways. Those responsible for writing these appeals are trained to be careful about giving prospective donors certain impressions, without being too explicit.
For example, when Donald Trump’s political operation wanted to take advantage of interest in Georgia’s U.S. Senate runoff elections, it sent out a message that said, “We MUST defend Georgia from the Dems!” The phrasing probably led contributors to believe that if they give Team Trump money, it’d benefit the Republican candidates in next week’s races.
But we know that’s not the case — the president’s operation has used Georgia for fundraising, without actually directing any money to the state — and if you read the specific wording of the appeal, it relied solely on suggestions. There are no literal lies, only misleading insinuations.
This made it all the more notable last week when Team Trump sent a fundraising pitch that included a demonstrably false claim. The Wall Street Journal noted what the president’s operation did after he denounced the bipartisan economic relief package that passed Congress.
The president’s campaign began fundraising off of Mr. Trump’s opposition to the coronavirus relief package. On Wednesday, the campaign sent out a fundraising email in Mr. Trump’s name. “I need you to know that I will ALWAYS FIGHT for you. I will NEVER accept a bad deal, which is why I have sent the Covid Relief Bill BACK to Congress,” the fundraising email said.
The timeline unfolded quickly: Congress approved the relief package on Monday; Trump denounced it as a “disgrace” on Tuesday; and the president’s political operation told donors that Trump “sent the Covid Relief Bill BACK to Congress” on Wednesday.
Except, of course, that wasn’t true. The president hadn’t sent the bill back, and four days after the fundraising appeal reached donors, Trump actually signed the measure into law.
But donors saw the opposite message. “This bill is a DISGRACE,” the president’s written fundraising letter read. “It’s called the Covid Relief Bill, but it has almost nothing to do with Covid, and it provides minimal relief for the American People…. I’m calling on my most fierce and loyal supporters to take action and STAND WITH ME in DEMANDING Congress rework this bill. Can I count on your support?” The text is accompanied by a series of links in which unsuspecting Republicans could show their “support” for Trump by sending him their money.
The usual caution in appeals, relying on vague and misleading impressions, was cast aside. Team Trump straight up sent out an appeal for money based on demonstrably false claims.
And that got me thinking: can they do that? Can a president ask for cash while lying?









