According to the latest filing, the New York
Republican federal account received a total of $ 1.9 million in contributions in 2017, including $ 756,000 from individuals.
Not exact matches
While
Republican leaders argued it would, every major independent analysis of the bill, known as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, showed that it would grow the
federal debt over the next 10 years even when
accounting for that increased growth.
While
Republican leaders and Trump administration officials promised as recently as three weeks ago that the bill would pay for itself with economic growth, the analyses have been universal: They have shown that the bill would add roughly $ 1 trillion or more to the
federal deficit over 10 years, even when
accounting for the growth.
But the state
Republican party filed a complaint with the SEEC in late 2014, saying the Democratic Party violated the clean - elections statutes by taking advantage of the federally regulated
account's ability to accept contractor contributions under
federal election laws that are less restrictive than Connecticut's.
Steve Wynn made a contribution to the state
Republican Party's
federal account in 2016, records show.
Republicans and good - government advocates have argued that Democrats» use of the
federal account funds to pay for Malloy's state election campaign undermines, or even negates, the clean - election laws that the Democrats once championed.
U.S. Rep. Dan Maffei, D - Syracuse (left) has $ 1.1 million cash on hand in his campaign bank
account, according to new figures released by his campaign, widening his advantage over
Republican John Katko, right, who plans to tell the
Federal Election Commission that he raised about $ 100,000 in the first quarter.
Buerkle, a
Republican from Onondaga Hill, filed a campaign termination letter with the
Federal Election Commission on Friday and cleaned out her campaign bank
account.
Never mind that this brief
account of Senator Alexander's career is incredibly misleading; Alexander joined other
Republicans in calling for the elimination of the Department of Education in the mid-1990s, and has long pushed for a smaller
federal footprint in education.
According to the
account, the
Republicans believe «the [Dept. of Education] is trying to reassert
federal control by exceeding its authority with a rule that would require state and local spending in low - income schools receiving Title I funds to be equal or greater than non-Title I schools... and force schools to include teacher salaries when measuring spending between Title I and non-Title I schools...» At the same time, the story notes that «King is facing pressure from civil rights groups who want to ensure the new education law does not deprive low - income students of equal funding.»
At the
Republican National Convention last summer, the GOP adopted a platform detailing the Party's support for education savings
accounts, vouchers, tax credits, and portability of
federal funding.
The «decades - old credit scoring model» currently used «does not take into
account consumer data on rent, utility, and cell phone bill payments,»
Republican Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina wrote in August, when he unveiled a bill to require the
federal government to vet credit standards used for residential mortgages.