Collin County Citizens for Integrity PAC

Texas Committee

$2,412Cash on Hand
$12,252Total Contributions
$10,311Total Expenditures

Financial Activity

Top Contributors

Total Contributions
Name
Type
$1,500.00 Sharla Bush INDIVIDUAL
$1,000.00 Mckinney Values PAC ENTITY
$1,000.00 Nathan Sheets INDIVIDUAL
$774.08 Reno Marsh INDIVIDUAL
$765.00 Aggregated Unitemized Contributions INDIVIDUAL
$524.08 Byron Henry INDIVIDUAL
$524.08 Dar Kurtz INDIVIDUAL
$524.08 Winston Jones INDIVIDUAL
$512.30 Chuck Branch INDIVIDUAL
$500.00 Collin County Republican Assembly ENTITY
View All Contributors

Top Payees

Total Expenditures
Payee
Type
$4,219.07 Textp2p ENTITY
$1,100.00 Tammy Warren for Mckinney ENTITY
$952.16 Tom Thumb ENTITY
$893.41 GODaddy.com ENTITY
$652.14 Inform the Republic ENTITY
$409.12 Efundraising Connections ENTITY
$337.53 Meta Platforms Inc / Facebook ENTITY
$312.00 US Postal Service ENTITY
$200.00 Collin County Republican Assembly ENTITY
$200.00 Qt ENTITY
View All Payees

Top Loans

There is no loan data available.

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Related Articles

Transparency USA | 07/15/2021
On Monday, approximately 58 members of the Texas House of Representatives boarded private planes in Austin and flew to Washington, D.C. to avoid voting on an election integrity bill. 
Transparency USA | 04/09/2021
This article is Part 1 of a four-part series demonstrating how the money in a lobby sector can impact state politics and legislation. We’ve selected the Green Energy sector due to a resurgence of interest in a behind-the-scenes look at renewables following the 2021 snowstorms, but you can follow the money in any industry of interest that is spending lobbying dollars in Austin.
Tracy Marshall | 02/20/2019
Cries for “Campaign Finance Reform” come from both sides of the political aisle. It’s popular for candidates and interest groups to claim that we need to “get money out of politics” — and that limiting the amount of money citizens can donate to politicians and political causes is the way to do it.