Black Austin Democrats Political Action Committee
Texas Committee
$6,703Cash on Hand
$2,420Total Contributions
$5,965Total Expenditures
Financial Activity
Top Contributors
Total Contributions
Name
Type
$600.00 Sahiti Karempudi INDIVIDUAL
$130.00 Al Amado INDIVIDUAL
$90.00 Susana Carranza INDIVIDUAL
$90.00 Susana Carranza INDIVIDUAL
$60.00 Andrei Rogers INDIVIDUAL
$60.00 Idona Griffith INDIVIDUAL
$50.00 Diane Greene INDIVIDUAL
$50.00 Mary Patrick INDIVIDUAL
$40.00 Earl M Hairston INDIVIDUAL
$30.00 Angel Carroll INDIVIDUAL
View All Contributors
Top Payees
Total Expenditures
Payee
Type
$3,090.00 Vuka North Loop ENTITY
$1,287.50 Travis County Democratic Party (P) ENTITY
$844.07 NaCole Thompson INDIVIDUAL
$476.54 Taterque ENTITY
$159.80 Zoom US ENTITY
$97.17 ActBlue Texas ENTITY
$9.99 Eventbrite.com ENTITY
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Top Loans

There is no loan data available.

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Related Articles
Tracy Marshall | 07/27/2020
Last week, Texas campaign finance reports were released. We’ve cleaned up the data and made it easy to search, so you can see for yourself who’s giving and who’s getting in Texas politics. Here are three surprising headlines to get you started: 
Tracy Marshall | 07/21/2020
Texas candidates just filed their semiannual campaign finance reports, giving voters a behind-the-scenes look into their fundraising as they head into the final stretch before the November elections. 
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.