Texas Forward Party PAC

Texas Committee

$8,734Cash on Hand
$9,286Total Contributions
$4,629Total Expenditures

Financial Activity

Top Contributors

Total Contributions
Name
Type
$1,000.00 Neely Becky INDIVIDUAL
$600.00 Richard Kennedy INDIVIDUAL
$470.00 Rob Aanstoos INDIVIDUAL
$450.00 Jack D Foster Jr INDIVIDUAL
$400.00 Richard Kennedy INDIVIDUAL
$300.00 Aaron Pickell INDIVIDUAL
$300.00 Elizabeth Winston-Jones INDIVIDUAL
$300.00 Richard Kennedy INDIVIDUAL
$300.00 Roger Neumann INDIVIDUAL
$250.00 Doug Perley INDIVIDUAL
View All Contributors

Top Payees

Total Expenditures
Payee
Type
$2,551.59 Squarespace Inc ENTITY
$395.52 X Corp ENTITY
$348.00 addevent.com ENTITY
$321.69 NationBuilder ENTITY
$255.71 Zapier Inc ENTITY
$250.01 Buffer Inc ENTITY
$190.99 Zoom Video Communications Inc ENTITY
$105.38 otter.ai ENTITY
$102.34 Bitwarden ENTITY
$48.00 Bank of America ENTITY
View All Payees

Top Loans

There is no loan data available.

View All Loans

Related Articles

Transparency USA | 03/10/2021
In session and out, lobbying is by far the biggest source of money in Texas politics. Taxpayers foot a sizable chunk of the bill, accounting for as much as $110 million (over 16 percent of the total reported lobbying money) during the 2020 election cycle time period. Another $70,429,959 (also around 16 percent of the total) has spent using taxpayer dollars in the 2021 so far.
Transparency USA | 02/12/2021
The stakes were particularly high for the 2020 elections, and not just for the presidency. At the state-level, some of the most closely watched races were Democratic efforts to flip swing state legislatures blue and take control of the upcoming redistricting process.
Transparency USA | 02/04/2021
Now that lawmakers have convened in Austin, private citizens and PACs are no longer able to make political contributions, so the sole financial influence on lawmakers during the legislative session comes from lobbyists. In fact, in session and out, lobbying is by far the biggest source of money in Texas politics — and taxpayers are footing the bill for a lot of it. This look at the City of Lubbock is part of our series analyzing taxpayer-funded entities in Texas.