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With Roger Sollenberger, Political Reporter

Pay Dirt is a weekly foray into the pigpen of political funding. Subscribehere to get it in your inbox every Thursday.

 

This week’s Big Dig … Inside the Gift Card Ploy Turning Campaign Finance Upside Down

Doug Burgum, the Republican governor of North Dakota, is running for president. But he has a problem: Most voters don’t know who he is.

 

Burgum has a solution for that—make a splash on the debate stage—but there’s another problem. The Republican National Committee requires candidates to have at least 40,000 individual donors in order to get on the debate stage, a challenge for the low-profile midwesterner.

 

So Burgum, once again, came up with a novel solution. He wants to give 50,000 campaign donors $20 all-purpose gift cards in exchange for a $1 contribution. It’s a million dollar gambit that could work a lot more effectively than spending $1 million on a meager number of television ads.

 

This clever strategy, however, could create its own set of thorny legal problems, according to experts. Beyond that, the RNC may or may not find it meets their new donor requirements for qualification.

A headshot of Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) appears on the embellished pages of a storybook. In front of her are piles of golden coins.

Thirsty AF

 

The Daily Beast brought the question to seven experts in campaign finance law. All agreed on one thing: They’d never heard of anything like it. But while conversations were peppered with words like “desperation,” “gimmick,” and “thirsty,” the experts were divided on the legality.

 

Some believe the scheme, while perhaps unsavory, would count as legit campaign spending. Burgum would not need to qualify for the debate if he weren’t a candidate, they said, so in that sense the expenses pass the FEC’s “irrespective test.”

 

Other experts, however, argued that the ploy appears to be a reimbursement scheme, which would violate the “straw donor” ban—contributions in the name of another person. And some said it could add up to an en masse conversion of $950,000 in campaign funds to personal use, which would be another serious violation.

 

North by northwest

 

However, Burgum spokesperson Lance Trover told The Daily Beast that the giveaway actually has two purposes—a means to pull enough donors to get RNC approval, but also an outright monetary gift.

 

“Doug knows people are hurting because of Bidenflation and giving Biden Economic Relief Gift Cards is a way to help 50,000 people until Doug is elected President to fix this crazy economy for everyone,” Trover said. “It also allows us to secure a spot on the debate stage while avoiding paying more advertising fees to social media platforms who have owners that are hostile to conservatives.”

 

While some experts said that the second point could justify the gift card idea, the campaign, for whatever reason, didn’t mention that in its solicitations. Neither Burgum’s tweets promoting the offer nor the language on the paid landing page say that the offer will help the campaign accomplish anything other than covering the cost of the supporter’s donations and then some.

 

(The billionaire software developer turned governor doesn’t have to worry about how much this ploy would cost. For Burgum, it’s like lifting up the couch cushions: $1 million is one one-thousandth of $1 billion.)

 

“Probably explainable” 

 

Legal experts are split on the question.

 

Saurav Ghosh, director of federal reform at government watchdog Campaign Legal Center and a former enforcement attorney with the Federal Election Commission, falls in the “legal” camp.

 

“It does seem desperate, but I don’t really see a legal problem with it as long as everything is disclosed,” Ghosh told The Daily Beast.

 

Jordan Libowitz, communications director for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, offered a similar assessment.

 

“This is the single thirstiest thing I’ve seen in politics,” Libowitz told The Daily Beast. But he concluded that the move is “probably explainable” as traditional campaign spending. “If Burgum doesn’t get on that debate stage, the campaign is over,” he said.

 

Other experts, however, observed possible violations of the lines that Ghosh and Libowitz drew.

 

Michael Kang, a campaign finance specialist and professor at Northwestern University’s Pritzker School of Law, believes the arrangement violates the straw donor ban.

 

“The straw donor error is that you’re disclosing that you’re the contributor, when really it’s someone else,” Kang said. “In this case, it’s the campaign.”

 

Paul S. Ryan, a campaign finance expert and deputy executive director at the Funders’ Committee for Civic Participation, expressed the same concern.

 

“It’s the candidate’s money through a reimbursement scheme, so presumably these reports will be false, listing a donor’s name when it’s not really the donor,” Ryan said. When any of those donors passes the $200 threshold that requires disclosure of their personal information, he said, the Burgum campaign would appear to be in violation if those reports included the gift card donation.

 

Caleb Burns, a partner at the law firm Wiley Rein, explained that the restriction on using campaign funds for personal use is limited to situations where the campaign funds are spent for reasons “irrespective” of the campaign. 

 

“You can’t use campaign funds to pay the mortgage on your family home, but if an expense is tethered to a campaign purpose, then campaign funds can be spent without limit,” Burns said.

 

Consider the source

 

According to some experts, Burgum’s own explanation, as well as the language the campaign is presenting to donors in the fundraising solicitation itself, are essentially admissions that his operation is converting as much as $950,000 in campaign funds to personal use.

 

“People are hurting because of Bidenflation, and giving Biden Economic Relief cards is a way to help 50,000 people until we get in office and fix this crazy economy for everyone!” Burgum tweeted on Monday, including a link to the fundraising solicitation and its similar pitch.

 

“When it comes to providing economic relief to the American people, I’m not messing around!” Burgum added.

 

Brendan Fischer, a campaign finance expert and deputy director of Documented, told The Daily Beast that this appears to be an open acknowledgment that the campaign is violating the law, noting that the statute applies the personal use ban as covering “any person”—which would appear to include donors.

 

“Burgum is using campaign funds to cover people’s personal expenses, which is precisely what the law prohibits,” Fischer said, adding that the campaign “should have asked the FEC for an advisory opinion,” but “may have calculated that the notoriously deadlocked FEC is unlikely to enforce the law.”

 

Unraveled

 

Former FEC commissioner Ann Ravel, a Democrat, said that while the exchange “seems inappropriate,” she expressed doubt that the donation scheme would violate bans on straw donations or vote-buying.

 

“FEC regulations do not apply specifically to a situation where a candidate gives money or makes expenditures to encourage contributions to the campaign of the candidate for purposes related to the campaign,” Ravel told The Daily Beast, though she added that “the personal use issue might be applicable.”

 

Matter of debate

 

An RNC spokesperson didn’t return a request for comment. But a Republican source familiar with the early debate format planning told The Daily Beast that, while the party weighed the pros and cons before implementing the new qualification rule—which Democrats used in 2020—they didn’t foresee Burgum’s scheme.

 

“I don’t think any of us envisioned that scenario. He’s thinking outside of the box,” the Republican said, adding that no one has complained yet.

 

“I think it’s innovative, and he has the money to do it,” the person said, adding that “everybody’s talking about him” at the RNC.

 

“I don’t think he’ll do it for long,” the source said. “He got a lot of headlines.”

 

Read the full story here.

 

Jake Lahut contributed to this report.

 

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From Roger’s Notebook...

Coxcomb. Dan Cox, the 2022 right-wing Republican gubernatorial candidate from Maryland, told press outlets last week that he didn’t know who was behind a July 3 FEC filing creating a congressional campaign in his name, and that he had alerted the FEC.

 

It should be a short investigation: It was the treasurer Cox had hired to do just that.

 

Pay Dirt has reviewed emails and text messages that show Cox—a Trump-endorsed election denier and Jan. 6 attendee who once tweeted that Vice President Mike Pence was a “traitor”—had planned since at least mid-June to launch a 2024 congressional campaign with adviser Rory McShane.

 

The emails show McShane working with professional political accountant Tom Datwyler to set up the campaign committee, including an official “Dan Cox for Congress” WinRed fundraising landing page which, as of this writing, is still live. But McShane told Datwyler to terminate on July 4, the day after the treasurer had submitted the filing per an agreement weeks earlier.

 

In a June 14 email, Datwyler informed McShane that if the campaign filed before July 1, they would have to submit a full quarterly report covering April through June 30.

 

“To avoid that we can raise $ starting now until the end of the quarter, but holding off on depositing until 10 days before the end of the quarter,” Datwyler wrote.

 

McShane replied, “Perfect—we don’t want to file Q2. So get the WinRed up and we’ll start raising but not file until July 1.” Datywler sent him the WinRed link the next day.

 

A source familiar with the matter told The Daily Beast that after Cox decided against running, McShane failed to relay the message to Datwyler before the filing. A July 4 text message from McShane to Datwyler reads, “Hey Tom—Need you to terminate Dan Cox’s committee, he’s decided he’s not running.”

 

“Can do,” Datwyler replied.

 

The previous day, Cox told Maryland Matters that while he didn’t know the story behind the filing, he hadn’t ruled out a 2024 congressional bid.

 

“We didn’t make a decision,” Cox told Maryland Matters. “I’d like to know who did this.”

 

On Friday, The Frederick Post-News reported that Cox said he didn’t file and “had reported it to the FEC.”

 

Cruz missile. Last Thursday, the campaign committee for Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) filed to become the 17th campaign aligned with the “Team McConnell” joint fundraising committee. Team McConnell, which is also connected to the National Republican Senatorial Committee, raised just under $2 million last year, FEC data show, mostly from megadonors taking advantage of the joint committee’s high donation limit. (Former FTX executive Ryan Salame gave the PAC $121,100 on Oct. 3.)

 

This year, however, Team McConnell has reported just one donation—a $250,000 gift from General Atomics CEO Neal Blue on June 30. That same day, his company secured $94 million in federal funds to complete the third phase of a defense project that arms drones with air-to-air weapons; General Atomics is the “sole prime contractor” in the program, Defense Scoop reported last week.

 

Flynn again, begin again. A new “hybrid” super PAC that appeared on June 26—called “Fight Like a Flynn”—has filed its first quarterly report, which shows a $5,000 contribution from disgraced Gen. Mike Flynn. The PAC—whose treasurer, Robert Kiger, created two other committees around the same time—also reported a $5,000 contribution from close Flynn associate and Jan. 6 attendee Victor Mellor. Last October, the Associated Press reported that Flynn has set up a home base at “The Hollow”—Mellor’s 10-acre Venice, Florida, compound “that’s at times a children’s playland, wedding venue, organizing space and weapons training ground.”

 

The day after Flynn’s first visit to The Hollow, in May 2021, Mellor wrote on Facebook that there was a “war going on,” promising to dedicate “all our resources to the Flynns in this battle.” The property has since become the nerve center for a far-right community built around Flynn, featuring regular appearances from Proud Boy members and a gun range that AP reported has “hosted groups as large as 40” and provided “free shooting lessons to children as young as 6.”

 

Nassau Island. Indicted Rep. George Santos (R-NY) has officially lost another local ally. On Thursday, Santos’ new treasurer, Jason Boles, submitted an FEC form showing that the Devolder-Santos Nassau Victory Committee had jettisoned its former joint fundraising partner, the Nassau County Republican Committee. The PAC now consists only of Santos’ campaign and leadership PAC. Santos’ previous treasurer, a mystery person identified in FEC filings as “Andrew Olson,” had filed to terminate the committee in February, which the FEC still hasn’t approved—suggesting that Santos’ political finances are under scrutiny.

 

In a note below the Thursday filing, Boles wrote, “Updating Form 1 to provide for filing timely until termination is approved.” He added, “There are no bank accounts,” but did not elaborate.

 

Loss leader. The campaign for Rep. James Comer (R-KY) told the FEC this week that the U.S. Postal Service was to blame for seemingly misattributed 2022 donations. The filing, which came in response to an FEC inquiry last month, said that, “As was noted on the above referenced report, these contributions were issued for the 2022 General Election, but lost in the US Mail.” While the contributions were “issued and mailed in October 2022,” the filing said, the campaign didn’t gt them “until the US Postal Service finally delivered them in December 2022.”


Comer claimed earlier this year that he’d lost a so-called “whistleblower” in the House GOP’s Hunter Biden investigation. Like the campaign checks, the whistleblower turned up two months later—albeit in a federal indictment accusing him of being a Chinese spy.

 

More From The Beast’s Politics Desk

Steven Bannon appears in the foreground of the seal of the US Department of Justice. Behind him is a quote from a recent court affidavit of his.

Rep. Mike Lawler, the young Republican who upset Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney (D-NY) last year, made so many edits to his own Wikipedia page that the website warned him and then eventually banned him. Ursula Perano’s scoop is also a fun read—check it out here.

 

Rep. James Comer hails from a conservative part of Kentucky, and while he used to frown on gambling, that position changed as the scope of his office expanded. Sam Brodey reports that Comer’s seemingly subtle about-face raises serious questions about influence and ethics, and you can read about it here.

 

An influential GOP lobbyist and friend of Matt Gaetz was accused of raping the girl at the center of the Gaetz sex trafficking investigation—by the girl herself, in reply to defamation and RICO claims the lobbyist filed against her. If you didn’t already catch this doozy of a report from Jose Pagliery and me, you can catch up right here.

 

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