These Are the Biggest “Red Flags” for American Indian Voters

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A survey by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace asked Indian American citizens about their voting intentions for the upcoming U.S. presidential elections. While a majority of Indian Americans continue to favor the Democratic Party over the Republican Party, there has been an uptick in support towards Trump since the last U.S. presidential cycle in 2020.

The survey found that the most important issues for voters were inflation/prices (selected by 17 percent of respondents), abortion (13 percent), jobs/economy (13 percent) and immigration (10 percent). According to Carnegie, Republican respondents are more likely to be concerned by the state of the economy, while a higher share of Democrats are driven by the stance on abortion. Republican respondents were also more concerned by foreign policy, with a greater share naming U.S.-India relations (9 percent) and national security (5 percent) as their most-important issue.

Policy Red Flags for Indian American Voters

The following chart shows the most commonly cited reasons among survey respondents for not supporting either the Democratic Party or the Republican Party. For example, in the latter case, nearly one in five respondents highlighted how they thought the Republican Party is intolerant of minorities and 16 percent said that they thought the party is too influenced by Christian evangelicalism. Meanwhile, 27 percent of respondents said they were deterred from voting for the Democratic Party because they thought the party was weak on illegal immigration. Other options that put off voters included the view that the Democratic Party is influenced by the extreme left (17 percent).

This article originally appeared on Statista.com and was syndicated by MediaFeed.org

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Who Really Funds the US Presidential Campaigns?

Who Really Funds the US Presidential Campaigns?

In the run-up to the 2024 U.S. presidential election, President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris, and former President Donald Trump have collected more than $1 billion each from a variety of partisan interest groups up until October 29, 2024. Data from OpenSecrets shows that Harris and her supporters were more successful in raising funds, with the official campaign committee alone breaking the $1 billion barrier in the final days before voting commences on November 5.

While there are bipartisan groups that support more than just one candidate, the Statista chart shows only contributions made by organizations or individuals directly supporting either Harris’ or Trump’s election bid. At first glance, it is already apparent that the Trump campaign relies on the funds of so-called super PACs. The prefix super indicates that donations to these committees are not as tightly regulated and can exceed the donor limit of $5,000 per year.

Statista

While, in theory, super PACs are independent and their expenditures “not made in cooperation, consultation or concert with, or at the request or suggestion of, any candidate, or his or her authorized committees or agents, or a political party committee or its agents”, the reality is often different. For example, Make America Great Again Inc spent $323 million of its roughly $331 million raised in support of Donald Trump and opposition of his competitors in the Republican primary and incumbent President Joe Biden. The largest donor with $125 million is Thomas Mellon, heir to one of the richest families in the U.S. The second-largest super PAC in support of Trump is Elon Musk’s America PAC, with the tech billionaire’s aerospace company SpaceX contributing $75 million out of $146 million raised.

The Biden-Harris campaign, on the other hand, saw the most money raised outside of the official campaign committee come from so-called carey committees. These committees are a mixture of a super PAC and a regular PAC. They hold two accounts, one for unlimited donations and spending and another that adheres to the strict aforementioned caps. Around $485 million out of the $544 million coming from carey committees was raised by Future Forward USA and American Bridge 21st Century. The former received donations by, for example, a variety of unions and Silicon Valley venture capitalist company Greylock Partners. It has also been accused of receiving large amounts of secret donations towards the end of the 2020 presidential election. The considerably smaller American Bridge 21st Century’s donors include the organization with the same name, which calls itself “the largest research, tracking, and rapid response operation in the Democratic Party” and Silicon Valley’s Sequoia Capital, the latter of which has also given money to the Trump campaign.

Ever since President Biden announced he would stop campaigning for reelection and endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris as the new Democratic candidate, Republicans have questioned whether Harris could utilize the hundreds of millions of U.S. dollars from the war chest of the Biden reelection campaign. According to many experts, including the director of the progressive nonprofit Brennan Center for Justice’s Elections & Government Program Daniel I. Weiner and Nicholas Stephanopoulos, Kirkland & Ellis Professor of Law at Harvard, Harris is cleared to use the funds since she ran on a combined ticket with Joe Biden.

However, a current President stepping down from his reelection bid and passing the torch to his Vice President has no precedent in U.S. history, so it’s more a question of established practice than a clear legal ruling. According to Stephanopoulos, the FEC is still dealing with official complaints connected to the 2016 election, so there is virtually no chance that any decision barring Harris from utilizing the Biden campaign funds will be made before the election in November.

:BalkansCat /Istockphoto

Total partisan funding of the Harris/Trump campaigns as of Oct. 29, 2024 by group (in million U.S. dollars)

Official campaign Committee 

Trump 381.5

Harris (Biden until Jul. 21) 1,003.2

EvgeniyShkolenko /Istockphoto

Trump 111.7

Harris (Biden until Jul. 21) 9.8

rarrarorro/istockphoto

Trump 693.6

Harris (Biden until Jul. 21) 42.0


* outside groups with no donation limit

EvgeniyShkolenko/istockphoto

Trump 0.6

Harris (Biden until Jul. 21) 543.7


** hybrid of super PAC (no donation limit) and regular PAC (donation limit of $5,000/year per donor) Source: Federal Election Commission via OpenSecrets

This article originally appeared on Statista.com and was syndicated by MediaFeed.org .

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Featured Image Credit: EvgeniyShkolenko/istockphoto.

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