2026-04-15T15:30:57-0400 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
对冲基金经理斯蒂芬·曼德尔和妻子苏珊是一对亿万富翁权力夫妇,在选举季迅速行动已有前科。在2024年总统大选前,他们在康涅狄格州格林威治为乔·拜登举办了私人筹款晚宴。根据美国联邦选举委员会的记录,希拉里·克林顿、卡玛拉·哈里斯和约翰·克里都是曼德尔夫妇多年来向民主党竞选活动捐赠的8400万美元的受益者。
如今,这对夫妇正为2026年中期选举做准备。
联邦记录显示,今年曼德尔夫妇已为寻求联邦公职的民主党人提供了近1000万美元的支持,且预计还会有更多捐款。
一位曾参与六次总统竞选、与这对夫妇有过接触的资深民主党筹款人告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻:“他们是极具影响力且慷慨的支持者,从未提出过过多要求。”
曼德尔夫妇的捐款行为让人们得以窥见亿万富翁超级捐赠者如何成为美国政坛一股无可匹敌的力量。这个超富捐赠阶层正准备投入大量资源,参与这场将决定共和党还是民主党掌控下一届国会多数席位的选举。
2024年,超级富豪捐赠者向选举投入了超过30亿美元,领头的是全球首富埃隆·马斯克。他为特朗普总统和其他共和党候选人花费了超过2.9亿美元,创下纪录。总体而言,这30亿美元的支出绝大多数有利于共和党——这些捐赠者给共和党及其盟友组织的捐款是给民主党及其盟友组织的五倍。
这一趋势似乎仍在延续:今年2月初,共和党全国委员会、超级政治行动委员会、MAGA Inc.以及其他与特朗普相关的组织手头拥有超过6亿美元现金,而民主党全国委员会和国会超级政治行动委员会则短缺近2亿美元。
自最高法院一项裁决为企业和工会开启无限制捐款闸门以来的15年里,选举支出大幅膨胀。双方的亿万富翁都资助了一批不透明的政治组织,这引发了人们对“匿名资金”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1gdmX0EjZU 和宽松披露法的新质疑,同时也引发了一些组织是否遵守现有规定的疑问。
这些跨党派运作的组织的结构和现金流,即便在本已错综复杂的竞选捐款领域,也呈现出了新的复杂程度。
2024年大选后,中间派民主党人成立了“多数民主党政治行动委员会”,用于招募新候选人,并挑战党内更激进的派系。
曼德尔夫妇与旧金山的亿万富翁投资者、民主党筹款人马克·海辛一起,是“多数民主党政治行动委员会”的顶级资助者。自去年7月以来,该委员会公开披露的筹款总额中,超过90%来自曼德尔夫妇的350万美元捐款和海辛的100万美元捐款。
“多数民主党政治行动委员会”与另一个名为“The Bench”的政治委员会联合筹款,该委员会在其网站上宣称,其“目标是招募和支持下一代民主党领导人”。
专家表示,这两个委员会之间存在人员重叠,因此很难确定谁在为谁付费。他们指出,一些在新闻报道中被认定为“多数民主党政治行动委员会”服务的顾问,也在媒体报道中被提及与“The Bench”有关联。他们还被认为是两名民主党参议院候选人的顾问:密歇根州的马洛里·麦克莫罗和德克萨斯州的詹姆斯·塔拉里科。
联邦记录并未显示这两个政治行动委员会向这些顾问支付过任何费用。但麦克莫罗和塔拉里科的竞选团队确实向这些顾问支付了“通信咨询”费用。
威利·赖恩律师事务所合伙人、选举法与政府道德实践联合主席迦勒·伯恩斯告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻,相关规定允许顾问身兼多职,但“顾问必须格外小心,确保为一名客户开展的工作不会由另一名客户付费或补贴”。
联邦竞选财务法的核心是旨在保护民主进程并确保透明度的规则。这些规则严格禁止竞选团队与政治行动委员会就应独立进行的支出进行协调,也禁止双方互相支付费用。
伯恩斯表示,可能需要设置防火墙,以确保竞选活动和筹款委员会不会共享非公开信息。“否则,就可能产生需要申报的实物捐赠,甚至可能属于被禁止的行为,”他补充道。
但美国联邦选举委员会在处理竞选财务违规指控方面向来行动迟缓,而如今该委员会甚至完全无法运作。这个由六名成员组成的委员会目前仅剩两名委员,自2025年5月以来就一直缺少开展议事所需的四名委员。尽管特朗普总统在2月提名了两名委员,但他们尚未获得参议院确认。
预计最高法院将在6月前对捐款限额的合法性作出裁决,因此有关政党与联邦候选人协调支出的法律可能在未来几个月内发生变化。
民主党全国委员会的官员告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻,他们遵守所有联邦法规。“多数民主党政治行动委员会”的一名发言人表示,该组织“就战略、媒体和信息发布向公职人员和候选人提供建议”,且“不会将资金用于支持或反对候选人的付费宣传”。
“The Bench”的一名发言人表示,该组织“制定了严格的防火墙政策,遵守所有相关法律法规”。塔拉里科的竞选团队拒绝置评,麦克莫罗的竞选团队则未回应。
美国联邦选举委员会发言人迈尔斯·马丁表示,该委员会“无法就任何可能提交给委员会的潜在执法事项置评”。美国司法部未回应置评请求。曼德尔夫妇、海辛均未回应置评请求。
“作战计划”
密歇根州奥克兰大学公民参与中心主任、负责竞选财务教学的戴维·杜利奥将“多数民主党政治行动委员会”的运作模式描述为“进一步揭开了竞选财务领域神秘而浑浊的面纱”。
两党都参与其中。共和党为中期选举投入的资金可能包括来自特朗普总统的超级政治行动委员会MAGA Inc.的大量注资。联邦记录显示,自2024年大选以来,该组织已筹集到3亿美元资金,创下纪录,其中大量来自富裕捐赠者。根据布伦南司法中心的一份报告,其中96%的资金来自捐款100万美元或以上的捐赠者,62%来自捐款至少500万美元的捐赠者。
MAGA Inc.的发言人亚历克斯·法伊弗告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻,该组织“致力于保留并扩大共和党在众议院和参议院的多数席位”,但他拒绝透露其所谓的“作战计划”。
联邦记录显示,MAGA Inc.的最大捐赠者包括宾夕法尼亚州投资者、共和党亿万富翁杰夫·亚斯,能源高管凯尔西·沃伦,以及OpenAI总裁格雷格·布罗克曼和他的妻子安娜·布罗克曼。自2024年7月以来,该组织还从“保护美国伟大”非营利组织获得了至少8800万美元,这是一个与特朗普结盟的非营利组织,无需向美国国税局披露捐赠者信息。
其他有影响力的超级政治行动委员会进一步凸显了人们对匿名资金和亿万富翁影响力的担忧——其中一个名为“德克萨斯州支持保守多数”的组织,旨在支持德克萨斯州共和党参议员约翰·科宁。该政治行动委员会收到的单笔最大捐款是来自一个名为“俄亥俄州工作”的非营利组织的310万美元,该组织在联邦文件中登记的地址是弗吉尼亚州亚历山大市的一家Parcel Plus航运和邮寄商店。
去年12月,就在这笔捐款披露两周后,“俄亥俄州工作”的一名官员在俄亥俄州提交了文件,将该组织更名为“美国工作基金”。
更添谜团的是,这个非营利组织的名称与另一个组织相同。该组织因未提交财务披露文件而被撤销免税资格,并于2022年被俄亥俄州国务卿注销法人资格。2023年,在华盛顿问责与道德公民组织(CREW,一个进步派非营利组织)提起投诉后,该组织被卷入联邦选举委员会对匿名资金支出的调查。联邦选举委员会以党派划线3:3僵持,未能推进对该投诉的执法程序。
“德克萨斯州支持保守多数”的一名发言人未回应置评请求。
“当一个无需披露自身捐赠者信息的不透明实体向超级政治行动委员会捐赠数百万美元时,这极大地阻碍了公众了解谁在花费巨额资金支持——并可能影响——民选官员的能力,”CREW首席调查员马特·科利告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻。
科利表示,“当中介组织通过改名来‘变形’时,情况就更加棘手了”。
根据联邦记录,“德克萨斯州支持保守多数”的其他顶级捐赠者还有哪些?一批亿万富翁:黑石集团首席执行官斯蒂芬·施瓦茨曼,沃尔玛继承人S·罗布森·沃尔顿和吉姆·沃尔顿,以及软件公司Palantir的首席执行官亚历克斯·卡普。
在批评者看来,这种错综复杂的支出模式反映出一个日益隐秘的资金网络,其目的是秘密分发亿万富翁捐赠者的资金。
进步派非营利组织“公共公民”负责国会山伦理和竞选财务规则的说客克雷格·霍尔曼将其称为“竞选财务法的崩溃”的一部分。
“尽管对竞选资金来源设有捐款限额和披露要求,但富裕利益集团——尤其是亿万富翁——正在利用这些法律漏洞进行游说施加影响,”霍尔曼说道。
Billionaires, dark money fuel questions ahead of 2026 midterms
2026-04-15T15:30:57-0400 / CBS News
Hedge fund manager Stephen Mandel and his wife Susan are a billionaire power couple that has a history of springing into action come election season. Before the 2024 presidential contest, they hosted Joe Biden for a private fundraising dinner in Greenwich, Connecticut. Kamala Harris, Hillary Clinton, and John Kerry are other beneficiaries of the $84 million that the Mandels have sprinkled to Democratic campaigns over time, according to Federal Election Commission records.
Now, the couple is gearing up for the 2026 midterm elections.
The Mandels have given almost $10 million in support of Democrats seeking federal office this year, federal records show, with more expected.
“They are extremely influential and generous supporters who have never asked for very much,” one veteran Democratic fundraiser who has worked for half a dozen presidential campaigns and interfaced with the couple told CBS News.
The Mandels’ giving offers a window into how billionaire megadonors have become an unrivaled force in American politics. The ultra-wealthy donor class is preparing to pour resources into an election that will decide whether Republicans or Democrats have a majority in the next Congress.
In 2024, ultra-wealthy donors poured more than $3 billion into elections, led by the world’s richest man — Elon Musk. He spent more than $290 million supporting President Trump and other Republicans, a record sum. And overall, that $3 billion was spent overwhelmingly to benefit the GOP — these donors gave five times as much to Republicans and groups aligned with them as they did to Democrats.
That trend appears to be continuing: Republican Party committees, super PACs, MAGA Inc. and other Trump-related groups had over $600 million in cash on hand in early February, while Democratic Party committees and congressional super PACs were short of $200 million.
Election spending has ballooned in the decade and a half since a Supreme Court ruling that opened the floodgates for corporations and unions to donate without any limits. Billionaires on both sides have funded a constellation of opaque political organizations, raising fresh questions about “dark money”https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c1gdmX0EjZU and lax disclosure laws, as well as, in some cases, whether groups are complying with rules on the books.
The structures and cash flow of these organizations — which operate on both sides of the political aisle — have taken on a new level of complexity, even for the already serpentine world of campaign giving.
After the 2024 election, the Majority Democrats PAC was launched by centrist Democrats to recruit new candidates and challenge the party’s more progressive wing.
The Mandels, along with Mark Heising — a billionaire investor in San Francisco who also fundraises for Democrats — are top funders of Majority Democrats PAC. More than 90% of its publicly-disclosed fundraising haul since last July is traced to $3.5 million in contributions from the Mandels and $1 million from Heising.
Majority Democrats PAC fundraises alongside another political committee called The Bench, which says on its website that it “is recruiting and supporting the next generation of Democratic leaders.”
Personnel overlap between the two committees makes it hard to determine who is being paid by whom, experts said, noting that some of the same consultants who have been identified in news reports as working on behalf of Majority Democrats have also been quoted in the press as being affiliated with The Bench. They have also been identified as advisers to two Democratic senate candidates: Mallory McMorrow in Michigan and James Talarico in Texas.
Federal records do not list any payments from these two PACs to the consultants. But there are direct payments from the McMorrow and Talarico campaigns to the consultants for “communications consulting.”
Caleb Burns, a partner at law firm Wiley Rein and the co-chair of its election law and government ethics practice, said the rules allow consultants to wear multiple hats, but told CBS News “the consultants must take great care to ensure their work for one client is not paid for or subsidized by another.”
At the heart of federal campaign finance law are rules designed to protect the democratic process and ensure transparency. They strictly prohibit campaigns from coordinating with PACs on spending that should be made independently, or from the two covering each other’s expenses.
Burns said firewalls might be needed to make certain campaigns and fundraising committees aren’t sharing non-public information. “Otherwise, in-kind contributions can result that are subject to reporting and potentially, prohibited,” he added.
But the Federal Election Commission has always been slow to act on allegations of campaign finance violations, and now the commission isn’t acting at all. The six-member commission is down to two and has lacked the four members it needs for a quorum since May 2025. Although Mr. Trump nominated two members in February, they have not yet been confirmed by the Senate.
Laws governing political parties’ spending in coordination with federal candidates could be changing in the next few months, since the Supreme Court is expected to rule by June on the legality of the caps.
Officials with the Democratic committees told CBS News they comply with all federal regulations. A Majority Democrats spokesperson said the group “advises officeholders and candidates on strategy, press, and messaging” and “does not spend funds on paid communications that support or oppose candidates.”
A spokesperson for The Bench said it “has in place a strict firewall policy adhering to all the correct statutes.” The Talarico campaign declined to comment, and the McMorrow campaign did not respond.
Myles Martin, a spokesman for the Federal Election Commission, said it “cannot comment on any potential enforcement matters that may come before the commission.” The Department of Justice did not respond to requests for comment. The Mandels did not respond to requests for comment, nor did Heising.
“Battle plans”
David Dulio, who teaches campaign finance as the director of the center for civic engagement at Oakland University in Michigan, characterized the Majority Democrats arrangement as “another look into the mysterious and murky world” of campaign finance.
Both parties participate. Republican spending aimed at the midterm elections may include significant infusions from President Trump’s super PAC, MAGA Inc. Wealthy donors have contributed significantly to the organization’s $300 million haul since the 2024 election, federal records show — a record-breaking sum. It has raised 96% of the funds from donors who gave $1 million or more, while 62% came from donors who gave at least $5 million, according to a report by the Brennan Center for Justice.
Alex Pfeiffer, a spokesman for MAGA Inc., told CBS News that the group “is committed to retaining and building the GOP majorities in the House and Senate,” but he declined to share what he referred to as its “battle plans.”
The largest donors to MAGA Inc., have included Republican billionaires Jeff Yass, a Pennsylvania-based investor, energy executive Kelcy Warren, as well as OpenAI President Greg Brockman and his wife, Anna Brockman, federal records show. It also has received at least $88 million since July 2024 from Securing American Greatness, a Trump-aligned nonprofit that is not required by the IRS to disclose its donors.
Other influential super PACs underscore the heightened questions about dark money and billionaire influence — including one called Texans for a Conservative Majority that supports Republican Texas Senator John Cornyn. The single largest contribution that the PAC has received was $3.1 million from a nonprofit listed as Ohio Works — which said on federal filings that its address was a Parcel Plus shipping and mailing store in Alexandria, Virginia.
In December of last year, just two weeks after the donation was disclosed, paperwork was filed in Ohio by an Ohio Works official changing its name to America Works Fund.
Adding to the mystery, the name of the nonprofit matches that of another organization that saw its tax-exempt status revoked after failing to file financial disclosures, as well as its corporate status canceled in 2022 by the Ohio secretary of state. A year later, in 2023, that group found itself roped into a Federal Election Commission investigation about dark money spending after a complaint was filed by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, or CREW, a progressive nonprofit. The Federal Election Commission deadlocked 3 to 3, along party lines, on moving forward on enforcement of the complaint.
A spokesperson for Texans for a Conservative Majority did not respond to requests for comment.
“When an opaque entity that is not required to disclose its own donors gives millions to a super PAC, it significantly impedes the public’s ability to know who is spending significant sums to benefit — and potentially influence — elected officials,” Matt Corley, CREW’s chief investigator, told CBS News.
Corley said it is “even more difficult when the intermediary organization shapeshifts by changing its name.”
Who are other top donors to Texans for a Conservative Majority? A cadre of billionaires, according to federal records: Blackstone CEO Stephen Schwarzman, Walmart heirs S. Robson Walton and Jim Walton, and Alex Karp, the CEO of software firm Palantir.
To critics, this kind of tangled spending dynamic reflects an increasingly secretive web of money built to covertly distribute money from billionaire donors.
It is part of what Craig Holman, a Capitol Hill lobbyist on ethics and campaign finance rules for the progressive nonprofit Public Citizen, called the “breakdown of campaign finance laws.”
“Despite contribution limits and disclosure requirements on the sources of campaign money, wealthy interests — and billionaires in specific — are exploiting influence-peddling avenues around these laws,” Holman said.
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