OPINION
GAIL
COLLINS
Guess Who Wants Your Money
Feb. 2,
2022
Gail
Collins
By Gail
Collins
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/02/opinion/trump-campaign-fundraising.html
Welcome to
February! Any notable January accomplishments to report, people? Well, I
received 266 email messages from Donald Trump, asking for money. Gotta be a
lifetime achievement award in there somewhere.
“HAPPY NEW
YEAR, Friend,” began one of his missives. (In this one-way correspondence,
Trump always calls me Friend. The last time I saw him in person, he complained,
“You’ve never been nice to me.” But apparently in fund-raisingville, we’re best
pals.)
“You’ve
always been one of my BIGGEST supporters,” he added with grace and stupendous
inaccuracy, “which is why I want YOU to be our VERY FIRST DONOR of 2022.” I got
this particular message on Jan. 26, which makes it highly unlikely that the
first spot was still open, although one can hope.
About 60 of
my Trump fund-raising emails were signed by one of his sons. Busy boy, Don Jr.
He also just co-founded his own publishing imprint, which reportedly gave Dad a
multimillion-dollar advance for “Our Journey Together,” a photo book for which,
Junior said, our former president “wrote all the captions, including some by
hand.”
The profits
from the book could presumably go to help defray the costs of defending Trump
in the multitudinous lawsuits filed against him for everything from misusing
inauguration funds to inciting the Jan. 6 riot in Washington. Of course, he’s
already sitting on a cushion of about $122 million in political donations, so
an immediate fall into pauperism seems unlikely.
And if all
else fails they’ve got Melania’s hat, which was available to a fan of
historical fashion for a mere $250,000.
Now some of
you may have managed to avoid the Trump email list but are still being barraged
by tons of requests for donations from candidates for the Senate, House,
governor and so on. Feel free to read them.
You’re
going to want to support good people who are actually running for office. Find
someone you like and send a contribution. Otherwise the folks who get elected
are going to be sworn into their new jobs believing that all their success is
due to the generosity of extremely rich people and lobbyists.
According
to my deeply unscientific research, Beto O’Rourke, the Texas gubernatorial
hopeful, is one of the emailing champs on this front. And I’m sure a lot of you
have heard from Nancy Pelosi, who’s collecting cash for the House Democratic
team and gets points for her talent at raising alarm about fund-raising
successes on the other side. (“My heart is racing, Gail. …”)
This week’s
award for creative nagging for money is still pending, but my current favorite
is John Fetterman, the Democratic lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania, who’s
running for the Senate seat being vacated by Republican Pat Toomey.
“Gail,
Today the world’s most famous groundhog and Pennsylvania hero, Punxsutawney
Phil, predicted six more weeks of winter. No matter to me (I’m just gonna keep
wearing shorts) but I figured you could use some good news,” he wrote.
You will
notice Fetterman’s team has gotten my name. And at least on my email list, he
was the first to clock in with a Groundhog Day connection. I guess he wanted to
remind everybody that he wore shorts when he greeted President Biden at the
site of that collapsed Pennsylvania bridge. Also, of course, to tack on a tiny
note suggesting a $5 donation.
I got 35
emails from Fetterman in January. Points for perseverance or penalties for
pestiness?
Daniel
Weiner of the Brennan Center’s Elections and Government Program told me last
year that he’d spent Thanksgiving listening to his relatives complain about the
deluge of fund-raising emails they were getting. Now he reports that in
preparing to welcome in a new year, he spent three hours in the kitchen with
his mother, trying to clear out the flood of pleas she’s getting by text.
(Did you
know that you can donate to political campaigns via text these days?
Authorized, Weiner said, by the Federal Election Commission “in one of its rare
acts of doing something.”)
Weiner
didn’t have time to also tackle his mother’s email deluge on his visit. “But
I’m sure I’ll spend Passover bent over her phone,” he sighed.
By the way,
all requests for money are supposed to be accompanied by a little spot you can
click to discontinue the correspondence. But experts say your tormentors will
just get your address back from another mailing list.
“Once
politicians have your name, they’re going to sell it,” said Rick Hasen, a
professor at the University of California, Irvine, who keeps track of these
things.
Oh well.
Nobody ever said democracy came cheap.
One of my
favorite parts of the Trump letters is his soulful assurance that he gets up
every day hoping he’ll finally be hearing from his great friend Friend, only to
have his heart broken once again.
“This will
be the trip of a lifetime, Friend, and I can’t think of anyone else I’d rather
have there with me,” Trump wrote on Tuesday, promising a visit to Mar-a-Lago to
the winner of a special donor contest. “I’ve asked to see the next list of
entries TOMORROW, and I don’t want to get another list without Friend on it.”
Gee, it
sounds like he’s been dwelling on this day and night. Amazing he can find the
time to run around the country claiming the election was stolen.
Gail
Collins is an Op-Ed columnist and a former member of the editorial board, and
was the first woman to serve as the Times editorial page editor, from 2001 to
2007. @GailCollins • Facebook
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