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.
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 |
|---|---|
| $1,500.00 | Sharla Bush |
| $1,000.00 | Mckinney Values PAC |
| $1,000.00 | Nathan Sheets |
| $774.08 | Reno Marsh |
| $765.00 | Aggregated Unitemized Contributions |
| $524.08 | Byron Henry |
| $524.08 | Dar Kurtz |
| $524.08 | Winston Jones |
| $512.30 | Chuck Branch |
| $500.00 | Collin County Republican Assembly |
Top Payees
Total Expenditures | Payee |
|---|---|
| $4,219.07 | Textp2p |
| $1,100.00 | Tammy Warren for Mckinney |
| $952.16 | Tom Thumb |
| $893.41 | GODaddy.com |
| $652.14 | Inform the Republic |
| $409.12 | Efundraising Connections |
| $337.53 | Meta Platforms Inc / Facebook |
| $312.00 | US Postal Service |
| $200.00 | Collin County Republican Assembly |
| $200.00 | Qt |
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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.
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.
