Tim Carney had a remarkable piece in the Washington Examiner this week in which
he looked for campaign contributions from the IRS Cincinnati office.
Not exact matches
Investigators
looking into de Blasio's fundraising practices are now scrutinizing his 2013
campaign for possible straw donors, checking to see if they were either reimbursed
for their
contributions or given cash to pass along to the
campaign in order to skirt the city's donation limits.
Definitely swing by the site, and if you're
looking for a place to start, check out this
contribution straight from the e.politics bunker, a ditty we're calling «Five Lessons
for Advocates from Obama's 2012 Digital
Campaign.»
Take a
look at what elected officials do in exchange
for those
campaign contributions,» he said.
State Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman has subpoenaed the Nassau GOP and County Executive Edward Mangano's re-election
campaign for information about
contributions from superstorm Sandy contractors including
Looks Great Services, which has nearly $ 70 million in debris - removal contracts with Nassau, attorneys
for the recipients said.
Compliance reviewers have a list of things they
look for - whether names and addresses are complete, whether
campaign contributions exceed legal limits, and so on.
Second, one important answer can be found by
looking at whom Cuomo, Malloy, Wyman and other pro-education reform politicians turn to
for major
campaign contributions.
On the face of it, this Denver Post article by Yesenia Robles
looks like pretty standard reporting of political
campaign contributions for the currently hot Denver Public Schools board election.
The fact (publicly available) that I contributed to Obama's presidential
campaign (which is the kind of thing they usually
look for, political
contributions) doesn't seem to fit their narrative (had I been making
contributions to the Republicans or Libertarians, well I'm sure that would have been reported).