DHS Secretary Noem's Latest Announcement for Minneapolis Operations Will Likely Anger Libs
If You Get Your Morals From Musicians, You’re Probably a Moron
Arrest of Don Lemon Had the Sunday Shows Acting Acidic, 'Melania' Panned by...
The Choices That We Make
A Test of Wills
Tax the Dog (Walker)
Billie Hellish
Democrats Have Bastardized What it Means to Protest
NC Senate Candidate Once Declared His Final Month as Gov. 'International Migrant Month'
Alberta Pays More, Gets Less—and Performs Better
Russia Will Go for It All in Ukraine in 2026, and Lose
Canada Played Dirty to Keep This American Out of the Olympics. Was It...
Bill and Hillary Clinton Reverse Course and Will Testify in Front of Congress
CNN Disgustingly Glorifies Teenage 'ICE Watchers' in New Story
Here's How Democrats Are Making Their Cities Even More Dangerous
Tipsheet

The Trump Campaign Spent $208,000 on Hats in May

The Trump campaign, which only has $1.3 million dollars cash-on-hand according to newly released FEC filings, spent $208,000 on hats in May. Hillary Clinton has $42 million cash-on-hand.

Advertisement

Trump also appears to have spent a significant amount of campaign money paying his own businesses and properties.

And then there's this:

He has a staff of around 70 people — compared with nearly 700 for Mrs. Clinton — suggesting only the barest effort toward preparing to contest swing states this fall. And he fired his campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, on Monday, after concerns among allies and donors about his ability to run a competitive race.

The Trump campaign has not aired a television advertisement since he effectively secured the nomination in May and has not booked any advertising for the summer or fall. Mrs. Clinton and her allies spent nearly $26 million on advertising in June alone, according to the Campaign Media Analysis Group, pummeling Mr. Trump over his temperament, his statements and his mocking of a disabled reporter. The only sustained reply, aside from Mr. Trump’s gibes at rallies and on Twitter, has come from a pair of groups that spent less than $2 million combined.

Mr. Trump’s fund-raising for May reflects his lag in assembling the core of a national finance team. In the same month that he clinched the Republican nomination, Mr. Trump raised just $3.1 million and was forced to lend himself $2 million to meet costs.

Advertisement

What could possibly go wrong?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement