RGA Brings In Record-Breaking $156 Million In 2018 Cycle

RGA To Spend Over $60 Million On Governors’ Races In Final Three Weeks 

WASHINGTON D.C. – The Republican Governors Association announced $42.6 million raised in the third quarter of 2018, bringing its fundraising total for the 2017-2018 cycle to a new record-setting $156 million. The third quarter total doubled what the RGA raised in the same time period in 2014 ($21.3 million), the last comparable year with 36 gubernatorial elections. The RGA also announced today that it will spend over $60 million on governors’ races in these final three weeks of the election, expanding targeted ad campaigns to elect Republican governors.

The $156 million raised thus far by the RGA in the 2018 cycle significantly eclipses the Democratic Governors Association’s $103 million fundraising figure from the same time period, announced earlier this morning by the Washington Post. This once again confirms that the RGA possesses a fundraising operation far superior to the DGA’s.

“The RGA’s impressive haul is a direct result of the hard work of Republican governors across the country,” said RGA Chairman Governor Bill Haslam of Tennessee. “Republican governors are taking action and delivering results, and continue to prove why they are known as America’s Doers. Donors across the country agree: the best investment for the advancement of conservative policies in America today is with Republican governors.”

“With just three weeks until Election Day, the RGA is defending the highest number of Republican governorships ever in a single election year, but these resources give us the ability to compete and ensure voters understand why Republican governors are the best hope for moving their states forward,” said RGA Executive Director Paul Bennecke. “The RGA has aired TV ads, directly or through partners, in more than 20 states this year, and we plan to spend over $60 million in the last three weeks alone. We are not taking any race for granted and we will not leave anything on the table.”