Republican Victory In North Carolina Was Bolstered By Outside Spending
Rep.-elect Dan Bishop of North Carolina raised a fraction of what his Democratic opponent received in the lead-up to Tuesday’s special election, but large sums of outside spending helped push the Republican over the edge to victory.
Bishop’s campaign raised $1.95 million, less than half of Democrat Dan McCready’s $4.95 million fundraising haul, according to Federal Election Commission (FEC) records covering up to Aug. 21, the latest available data.
The race for North Carolina’s 9th Congressional District, which was described as a potential 2020 bellwether, was flooded with nearly $11 million in outside spending that favored Bishop by a factor of 2-to-1, The Charlotte Observer reported.
Bishop defeated McCready with 50.7% of the vote compared with the Democrat’s 48.7%. (RELATED: Republicans Dan Bishop, Greg Murphy Win North Carolina Special Elections)
“What this amount of money indicates is how much both parties are willing to truly invest in elections that may not have a governing consequence but have more strategy and symbolism,” political scientist Michael Bitzer said, according to the Observer.
The Republican National Committee (RNC) has raised $79 million so far in 2019 compared to the $36 million the Democratic National Committee (DNC) raised.
The RNC has no debt and a war chest of $46.6 million as of the end of July, the latest available records with the FEC, dwarfing the DNC’s cash reserves of $9 million and $5.6 million in debts.
The top outside spender in the race was the National Republican Congressional Committee (RNCC), which dumped $3.1 million into ads attacking McCready. The group’s counterpart, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC), spent $1.2 million attacking Bishop.
Other major outside spenders in the race were the House Republican-tied Congressional Leadership Fund and Club for Growth Action, “super” political action committees that spent $2.3 million and $1 million, respectively, attacking McCready.
Bishop was the beneficiary of $6.8 million in outside spending while McCready benefitted from $3.9 million, the Observer reported.