David Simpson

$160Cash on Hand
$563,117Total Contributions
$784,882Total Expenditures
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Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions
Name
Type
$40,000.00 Nelson J Roach INDIVIDUAL
$30,000.00 Phil Simpson INDIVIDUAL
$25,000.00 Baron & Budd PC ENTITY
$20,000.00 Texas Trial Lawyers Association PAC ENTITY
$16,600.00 David Simpson INDIVIDUAL
$15,000.00 Provost & Umphrey Law Firm, LLP ENTITY
$15,000.00 The Gallagher Law Firm LLP ENTITY
$15,000.00 Vance Freeman INDIVIDUAL
$15,000.00 Wade Johnson INDIVIDUAL
$15,000.00 Ward Timber Holdings LTD ENTITY
View All Contributors
Top Payees
Total Expenditures
Payee
Type
$282,068.29 Wishlist Direct / VoterDirect Texas ENTITY
$67,175.00 Anthem Media Inc ENTITY
$57,875.00 Frontline Political Strategy ENTITY
$55,053.49 Vici Media Group ENTITY
$39,603.16 Danwal Inc ENTITY
$29,336.23 Kristi Bullock INDIVIDUAL
$29,082.58 Don Rasmussen INDIVIDUAL
$25,919.00 Macias Strategies LLC ENTITY
$23,167.25 Chapter Films LLC ENTITY
$18,235.92 Campaign Marketing Strategies Inc ENTITY
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Top Loans

There is no loan data available.

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Top Personal Contributions

From reports filed by the recipients of these funds, it appears these transactions originated from personal rather than campaign accounts.

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Related Articles
Transparency USA | 08/25/2021
Across the 10 states included in Transparency USA’s database, several prominent women dominated donor lists in the 2020 election cycle. Some, like Karla Jurvetson and Deborah Simon, targeted key state-level elections across multiple swing states. Others focused their contributions closer to home, supporting candidates and PACs in their state of residence. While Transparency USA focuses on state-level campaign finance, all of these women have supported federal candidates and causes as well. See those contributions here.
Tracy Marshall | 10/21/2020
The most closely watched battle in Texas state-level politics is the effort by Democrats to flip the Texas House to blue this November. If Democrats can hold the 12 seats they gained in 2018 and take nine more, they will control the Texas House for the first time in more than two decades. The upcoming redistricting process, set to happen in 2021, redraws the legislative maps for both state and federal legislatures and makes this election even more consequential.
Transparency USA | 12/11/2018
1.  Texas Association of REALTORS PAC ($35,867,910): The Realtors are the powerhouse of money in Texas politics. Yes, you might be surprised to find that your realtor’s professional dues support one of the most powerful — and certainly the most well-funded — PACs in Texas. What might be even more surprising is that the Texas Association of Realtors PAC (TREPAC) frequently uses its political heft to support liberal Republicans and the occasional Democrat. Apparently, this cycle, they believed their PAC account was too flush with cash, as they purchased more than $29 million of money market instrument mutual funds at Frost Bank. As for TREPAC’s donations directly to candidates, they appear to be motivated primarily by the desire to curry favor with those in power in Austin. They supported incumbents of every stripe in 2018, from the most conservative Republicans ($101,042 to Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and $60,000 to State Sen. Don Huffines) to liberal Republicans and Democrats ($55,000 to State Rep. Charlie Geren and $50,000 to State Sen. John Whitmire). During the all-important and ideologically-revealing primary season, the Realtors tended to support the more moderate to liberal candidate in each race, including State Reps. Jason Villalba and Wayne Faircloth and State Sen. Kel Seliger this election season. TREPAC’s largest donation to a candidate this cycle was $140,000 to Cody Harris, a realtor himself, who won one of the most watched elections of the primary season to take the seat of retiring State Rep. Byron Cook. With more than $29 million in the bank, $6.7 million dollars cash-on-hand in their PAC account, and the proven willingness to spend it, the Realtors will be a formidable force in Texas politics for the foreseeable future.