How Trump Steered Supporters Into Unwitting
Donations
Online donors were guided into weekly recurring
contributions. Demands for refunds spiked. Complaints to banks and credit card
companies soared. But the money helped keep Donald Trump’s struggling campaign
afloat.
Recurring donations swelled former President Donald J.
Trump’s campaign coffers in September and October, just as his operation’s
finances were deteriorating.
Shane
Goldmacher
By Shane
Goldmacher
April 3,
2021
Stacy Blatt
was in hospice care last September listening to Rush Limbaugh’s dire warnings
about how badly Donald J. Trump’s campaign needed money when he went online and
chipped in everything he could: $500.
It was a
big sum for a 63-year-old battling cancer and living in Kansas City on less
than $1,000 per month. But that single contribution — federal records show it
was his first ever — quickly multiplied. Another $500 was withdrawn the next
day, then $500 the next week and every week through mid-October, without his
knowledge — until Mr. Blatt’s bank account had been depleted and frozen. When
his utility and rent payments bounced, he called his brother, Russell, for
help.
What the
Blatts soon discovered was $3,000 in withdrawals by the Trump campaign in less
than 30 days. They called their bank and said they thought they were victims of
fraud.
“It felt,”
Russell said, “like it was a scam.”
But what
the Blatts believed was duplicity was actually an intentional scheme to boost
revenues by the Trump campaign and the for-profit company that processed its
online donations, WinRed. Facing a cash crunch and getting badly outspent by
the Democrats, the campaign had begun last September to set up recurring
donations by default for online donors, for every week until the election.
Contributors
had to wade through a fine-print disclaimer and manually uncheck a box to opt
out.
As the
election neared, the Trump team made that disclaimer increasingly opaque, an
investigation by The New York Times showed. It introduced a second prechecked
box, known internally as a “money bomb,” that doubled a person’s contribution.
Eventually its solicitations featured lines of text in bold and capital letters
that overwhelmed the opt-out language.
The tactic
ensnared scores of unsuspecting Trump loyalists — retirees, military veterans,
nurses and even experienced political operatives. Soon, banks and credit card
companies were inundated with fraud complaints from the president’s own
supporters about donations they had not intended to make, sometimes for
thousands of dollars.
“Bandits!”
said Victor Amelino, a 78-year-old Californian, who made a $990 online donation
to Mr. Trump in early September via WinRed. It recurred seven more times —
adding up to almost $8,000. “I’m retired. I can’t afford to pay all that damn
money.”
The sheer
magnitude of the money involved is staggering for politics. In the final two
and a half months of 2020, the Trump campaign, the Republican National
Committee and their shared accounts issued more than 530,000 refunds worth
$64.3 million to online donors. All campaigns make refunds for various reasons,
including to people who give more than the legal limit. But the sum the Trump
operation refunded dwarfed that of Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s campaign and his
equivalent Democratic committees, which made 37,000 online refunds totaling
$5.6 million in that time.
The
recurring donations swelled Mr. Trump’s treasury in September and October, just
as his finances were deteriorating. He was then able to use tens of millions of
dollars he raised after the election, under the guise of fighting his unfounded
fraud claims, to help cover the refunds he owed.
In effect,
the money that Mr. Trump eventually had to refund amounted to an interest-free
loan from unwitting supporters at the most important juncture of the 2020 race.
Marketers
have long used ruses like prechecked boxes to steer American consumers into
unwanted purchases, like magazine subscriptions. But consumer advocates said
deploying the practice on voters in the heat of a presidential campaign — at
such volume and with withdrawals every week — had much more serious
ramifications.
“It’s
unfair, it’s unethical and it’s inappropriate,” said Ira Rheingold, the
executive director of the National Association of Consumer Advocates.
Harry
Brignull, a user-experience designer in London who coined the term “dark
patterns” for manipulative digital marketing practices, said the Trump team’s
techniques were a classic of the “deceptive design” genre.
“It should
be in textbooks of what you shouldn’t do,” he said.
Political
strategists, digital operatives and campaign finance experts said they could
not recall ever seeing refunds at such a scale. Mr. Trump, the R.N.C. and their
shared accounts refunded far more money to online donors in the last election
cycle than every federal Democratic candidate and committee in the country
combined.
Over all,
the Trump operation refunded 10.7 percent of the money it raised on WinRed in
2020; the Biden operation’s refund rate on ActBlue, the parallel Democratic
online donation-processing platform, was 2.2 percent, federal records show
Several
bank representatives who fielded fraud claims directly from consumers estimated
that WinRed cases, at their peak, represented as much as 1 to 3 percent of
their workload. An executive for one of the nation’s larger credit-card issuers
confirmed that WinRed at its height accounted for a similar percentage of its
formal disputes.
That figure
may seem small at first glance, but financial experts said it was a shockingly
large percentage, considering that political donations represent a tiny
fraction of the overall United States economy.
In its
investigation, The Times reviewed filings with the Federal Election Commission
from the Trump and Biden campaigns and their shared accounts with political
parties, as well as the donation-processing sites ActBlue and WinRed, compiling
a database of refunds issued by day. The Times also interviewed two dozen Trump
donors who made recurring donations, as well as campaign officials, campaign
finance experts and consumer advocates. Nearly a dozen bank and credit card
officials from the nation’s leading financial institutions spoke for this
article on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal matters.
A clear
pattern emerged. Donors typically said they intended to give once or twice and
only later discovered on their bank statements and credit card bills that they
were donating over and over again. Some, like Mr. Blatt, who died of cancer in
February, sought an injunction from their banks and credit cards. Others
pursued refunds directly from WinRed, which typically granted them to avoid
more costly formal disputes.
WinRed said
that every donor receives at least one follow-up email about pending repeat
donations in advance and that the company makes it “exceptionally easy,” with
24-hour customer service, for people to request their money back. “WinRed wants
donors to be happy, and puts a premium on customer support,” said Gerrit
Lansing, WinRed’s president. “Donors are the lifeblood of G.O.P. campaigns.” He
noted that Democrats and ActBlue had also used recurring programs.
Jason
Miller, a spokesman for Mr. Trump, downplayed the rash of fraud complaints and
the $122.7 million in total refunds issued by the Trump operation. He said
internal records showed that 0.87 percent of its WinRed transactions had been
subject to formal credit card disputes. “The fact we had a dispute rate of less
than 1 percent of total donations despite raising more grass-roots money than
any campaign in history is remarkable,” he said.
That still
amounts to about 200,000 disputed transactions that Mr. Miller said added up to
$19.7 million.
“Our
campaign was built by the hardworking men and women of America,” Mr. Miller
said, “and cherishing their investments was paramount to anything else we did.”
Asked if
Mr. Trump had been aware of his operation’s use of recurring payments, the
campaign did not respond.
Mr. Trump’s
hyperaggressive fund-raising practices did not stop once he lost the election.
His campaign continued the weekly withdrawals through prechecked boxes all the
way through Dec. 14 as he raised tens of millions of dollars for his new
political action committee, Save America.
In March,
Mr. Trump urged his followers to send their money to him — and not to the
traditional party apparatus — making plain that he intends to remain the
gravitational center of Republican fund-raising online.
A small
yellow box and a flood of fraud complaints
The small
and bright yellow box popped up on Mr. Trump’s digital donation portal around
March 2020. The text was boldface, simple and straightforward: “Make this a
monthly recurring donation.”
The box
came prefilled with a check mark.
Even that
was more aggressive than what the Biden campaign would do in 2020. Biden
officials said they rarely used prechecked boxes to automatically have
donations recur monthly or weekly; the exception was on landing pages where
advertisements and emails had explicitly asked supporters to become repeat
donors.
But for Mr.
Trump, the prechecked monthly box was just the beginning.
By June,
the campaign and the R.N.C. were experimenting with a second prechecked box, to
default donors into making an additional contribution — called the money bomb.
An early test arrived in the run-up to Mr. Trump’s birthday, June 14. The
results were tantalizing: That date, a seemingly random Sunday, became the
biggest day for online donations in the campaign’s history.
Ronna
McDaniel, the R.N.C. chairwoman, crowed to Fox News about the achievement
without mentioning how exactly the party had pulled it off. “Republicans are
thinking smarter digitally,” she said, and were poised to “outwork, outdo, and
outmaneuver the Democrats at every turn.”
The two
prechecked yellow boxes would be a fixture for the rest of the campaign. And so
would a much larger volume of refunds.
Until then,
the Biden and Trump operations had nearly identical refund rates on WinRed and
ActBlue in 2020: 2.18 percent for Mr. Trump and 2.17 percent for Mr. Biden.
But from
the day after Mr. Trump’s birthday through the rest of the year, Mr. Biden’s
refund rate remained nearly flat, at 2.24 percent, while Mr. Trump’s soared to
12.29 percent.
In early
September — just after learning that it had been outraised by the Biden
operation in August by more than $150 million — the Trump campaign became even
more aggressive.
It changed
the language in the first yellow box to withdraw recurring donations every week
instead of every month. Suddenly, some contributors were unwittingly making as
many as half a dozen donations in 30 days: the intended contribution, the
“money bomb” and four more weekly withdrawals.
“You don’t
realize it until after everything is already in motion,” said Bruce Turner, 72,
of Gilbert, Ariz., whose wife’s $1,000 donation in early October became $6,000
by Election Day. They were refunded $5,000 the week after the election, records
show.
Around the
same time, officials who fielded fraud claims at bank and credit card companies
noticed a surge in complaints against the Trump campaign and WinRed.
“It started
to go absolutely wild,” said one fraud investigator with Wells Fargo. “It just
became a pattern,” said another at Capital One. A consumer representative for
USAA, which primarily serves military families, recalled an older veteran who
discovered repeated WinRed charges from donating to Mr. Trump only after
calling to have his balance read to him by phone.
The
unintended payments busted credit card limits. Some donors canceled their cards
to avoid recurring payments. Others paid overdraft fees to their bank.
All the
banking officials said they recalled only a negligible number of complaints
against ActBlue, the Democratic donation platform, although there are online
review sites that feature heated complaints about unwanted charges and customer
service.
The Trump
operation was not done modifying the yellow boxes. Soon, the fact that
donations would be withdrawn weekly was taken out of boldface type, according
to archived versions of the president’s website, and moved beneath other bold
text.
As the
campaign’s financial problems became increasingly acute, the yellow boxes
became dizzyingly more complex.
By October
there were sometimes nine lines of boldface text — with ALL-CAPS words
sprinkled in — before the disclosure that there would be weekly withdrawals. As
many as eight more lines of boldface text came before the second additional
donation disclaimer.
Even
political professionals fell prey to the boxes.
Jeff Kropf,
the executive director of the Oregon Capitol Watch Foundation, a conservative
group, said he had been “very careful” to uncheck recurring boxes — yet he
missed the “money bomb” and got a second charge anyway.
“Until
WinRed fixes their sneaky way of adding additional contributions to credit
cards like they did to me, I won’t use them again,” he said.
Mr.
Brignull, the user-experience designer who also serves as an expert witness in
legal cases involving misleading advertising, noted that a Consumer Rights
Directive in Europe prohibits companies from deploying a defaulted opt-in
tactic for recurring payments.
“It is very
easy for the eye to skip over,” he said. “The only really meaningful
information in that box is buried.”
The ‘Gary
and Gerrit’ operation
By last
summer, the Biden campaign had begun outraising Mr. Trump’s team, and the
president was hopping mad. For months, years even, his advisers had been
telling him how he had built a one-of-a-kind financial juggernaut. So why, Mr.
Trump demanded to know, was he off the television airwaves just months before
the election in critical battleground states like Michigan?
“Where did
all the money go?” he would lash out, according to two senior advisers.
Inside the
Trump re-election headquarters in Northern Virginia, the pressure was building
to wring ever more money out of his supporters.
Perhaps
nowhere was that pressure more acute than on Mr. Trump’s expansive and
lucrative digital operation. That was the unquestioned domain of Gary Coby, a
30-something strategist whose title — digital director — and microscopic public
profile belied his immense influence on the Trump operation, especially online.
A veteran
of the R.N.C. and the 2016 race, Mr. Coby had the confidence, trust and respect
of Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law, who unofficially oversaw the 2020
campaign, according to people familiar with the campaign’s operations. Mr.
Kushner and the rest of the campaign leadership gave Mr. Coby, whose talents
are recognized across the Republican digital industry, wide latitude to raise
money however he saw fit.
That meant
almost endless optimization and experimentation, sometimes pushing the
traditional boundaries. The Trump team repeatedly used phantom donation matches
and faux deadlines to loosen donor wallets (“1000% offer: ACTIVATED…For the
NEXT HOUR”). Eventually it ratcheted up the volume of emails it sent until it
was barraging supporters with an average of 15 per day for all of October and
November 2020.
Mr. Coby,
who declined an interview request for this article, outlined his philosophical
approach when offering advice to other ambitious young strategists after he was
named to the American Association of Political Consultants’ “40 under 40” list
in 2017: “Asking for forgiveness is easier than permission.”
Mr. Coby’s
partner in fund-raising was Mr. Lansing, the president of WinRed, which had
been created in 2019 as a centralized platform for G.O.P. digital contributions
after prominent Republicans feared they were falling irreparably behind
Democrats and ActBlue.
The Trump
and WinRed operations had been closely aligned since the platform’s inception —
Mr. Trump reportedly helped come up with the firm’s name — and the president’s
re-election operation amounted to a majority of all of WinRed’s business last
cycle, when it processed more than $2 billion.
Inside the
Trump orbit, “Gary and Gerrit” became something of a shorthand term for Mr.
Coby and Mr. Lansing, according to multiple senior Trump campaign and White
House officials.
The two
strategists were already well acquainted: They had worked together at the
R.N.C. in 2016, when Mr. Lansing oversaw its digital operations and Mr. Coby
was the director of advertising. And they were business partners in Opn Sesame,
a text messaging platform, which Mr. Lansing co-founded and served as chief
operating officer for; WinRed said he stepped away from its day-to-day
operations in early 2019.
Top Trump
officials said they did not know specifically who had conceived of using the
weekly recurring prechecked boxes — or who had designed them in the
increasingly complex blizzard of text. But they said virtually all online
fund-raising decisions were a “Gary and Gerrit” production.
“The
campaigns determine their own fund-raising strategies and make their own
decisions on how to use these tools,” Mr. Lansing said in WinRed’s statement.
Unlike
ActBlue, which is a nonprofit, WinRed is a for-profit company. It makes its
money by taking 30 cents of every donation, plus 3.8 percent of the amount
given. WinRed was paid more than $118 million from federal committees the last
election cycle; even after paying credit card fees and expenses like payroll
and rent, the profits are believed to be significant.
WinRed even
made money off donations that were refunded by keeping the fees it charged on
each transaction, a practice it said was standard in the industry, citing
PayPal; ActBlue said it does not keep fees for refunded donations. WinRed’s cut
of the Trump operation’s refunds would amount to roughly $5 million before
expenses. (Archived versions of WinRed’s website show it added a disclaimer
saying it would keep its fees around when refunds surged.)
There is
another reason Mr. Trump’s refund rates were so high: His campaign accepted
millions of dollars above the legal cap, a problem exacerbated by recurring
donations. A pianist in New York, for instance, contributed more than 100 times
in the months leading up to Election Day, going far past the legal limit of
$2,800. She was refunded $87,716.50 — three weeks after Election Day.
While every
large-scale campaign winds up accepting and returning some donations above the
legal limit, including Mr. Biden’s, the Trump situation stands out. Records
show that Mr. Biden’s campaign committee issued roughly $47,000 in refunds
larger than $5,000 after Election Day; Mr. Trump’s campaign issued more than $7
million.
Trump
officials attributed the excessive donations to enthusiastic supporters and said
the surge in postelection complaints was a result of losing the election, not
of the recurring donation tactics.
The use of
prechecked boxes is not unprecedented in politics, and WinRed said it was
simply adopting tactics that ActBlue put in place years ago. ActBlue said in a
statement that it had begun to phase out prechecked recurring boxes “unless
groups were explicitly asking for recurring contributions.” Some prominent
Democratic groups, including both congressional campaign committees, continue
to precheck recurring boxes regardless of that guidance. Still, Democratic
refund rates were only a small fraction of the Trump campaign’s last year.
Republicans
widely hailed WinRed as one of the standout successes of the 2020 cycle, and in
a memo last October the company declared itself the “trusted, recognizable
platform” for Republican giving. “Scam PACs, shady operators and outright fraud
is unfortunately a common occurrence in the online political donation world —
particularly on the right,” the memo stated. “WinRed helps civilize the Wild
West of the G.O.P. donation ecosystem.”
But for
some Trump supporters like Ron Wilson, WinRed is a scam artist. Mr. Wilson, an
87-year-old retiree in Illinois, made a series of small contributions last fall
that he thought would add up to about $200; by December, federal records show,
WinRed and Mr. Trump’s committees had withdrawn more than 70 separate donations
from Mr. Wilson worth roughly $2,300.
“Predatory!”
Mr. Wilson said of WinRed. Like multiple other donors interviewed, though, he
held Mr. Trump himself blameless, telling The Times, “I’m 100 percent loyal to
Donald Trump.”
Trump was
just the beginning
All told,
the Trump and party operation raised $1.2 billion on WinRed, and refunded
roughly 10 percent of it.
Whatever
blowback it received, WinRed was not deterred. Soon after the November election
ended, the two Republican Senate incumbents in Georgia, David Perdue and Kelly
Loeffler, deployed prechecked weekly recurring boxes in advance of their
January runoffs.
Predictably,
refund rates spiked.
Keith
Millhouse, a transportation consultant in California, intended to donate once
to Mr. Perdue, with the aim of keeping Republicans in control of the Senate. He
wound up a recurring contributor and called the practice “repugnant” and
“deceptive.”
“I’m busy
like a lot of other people during this Covid era and I just wanted to get in,
make a donation, get done and move on to what I needed to do next,” he said. “I
thought I had done that. Then I find out that, you know, I’m getting these
other charges.”
He canceled
the repeating charge when he saw the reminder email. But by then WinRed had
already processed his second $100 “bonus” contribution. He figured it was not
worth the hassle to protest. “Don’t try to sucker it out of me,” he said.
In the
final 2020 reporting period, from Nov. 24 through the end of the year, Mr.
Perdue and Ms. Loeffler refunded $4.8 million to WinRed donors — more than
triple the amount refunded by their Democratic rivals via ActBlue, even though
the Democrats had raised far more money online. The refunds have stretched into
2021 and have been a source of frustration for the Loeffler campaign, according
to a person familiar with the matter.
Now WinRed
is exporting the tools it pioneered during the Trump re-election across the
Republican Party, presaging a new normal for G.O.P. campaigns.
Today, the
websites of various Republican Party committees and top congressional
Republicans, including Representative Kevin McCarthy, the House minority
leader, and Senator Mitch McConnell, the Senate minority leader, include
prechecked yellow boxes for multiple or recurring donations.
And after
Mr. Trump’s first public speech of his post-presidency at the end of February,
his new political operation sent its first text message to supporters since he
left the White House. “Did you miss me?” he asked.


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