Even in the aftermath of the recent presidential election, both the Biden and Trump campaigns are still coordinating fundraising efforts. Each campaign is appealing to supporters, via email and official website solicitations, to donate to ongoing legal battles, which have resulted from President Donald Trump’s campaign alleging election fraud and President-elect Joe Biden’s campaign denying it.
On Trump’s official website, the campaign’s plea, in part, reads, “We can’t allow the Left-wing MOB to undermine our Election. President Trump needs his fiercest and most loyal defenders, like YOU, to step up and FIGHT BACK!”
Biden’s camp also is asking for donations. “We need to be able to afford the legal battles ahead, and ensure Trump doesn’t win them just because we don’t have the funds to fight back,” a statement on Joe Biden’s official campaign website reads. “Will you donate directly to the Biden Fight Fund right now so that we can pay for the new round of legal resources for our campaign and for Democrats across the country?”
Where Will These Post-Election Donations Go?
“Both President Trump and President-elect Biden have very enthusiastic donor bases, and these are people who have given money over and over again,” said Michael Beckel, research director at Issue One, a bipartisan political reform organization, as reported by NPR. “And so, as both Trump and Biden anticipate additional expenses, they’re trying to get their loyal supporters to open their wallets one more time, give just one last dollar to be able to cover some of these legal expenses.”
But Beckel said donors should read the fine print to find out where their money would actually go.
At the bottom of the Biden Fight Fund webpage, potential donors will find a statement detailing that donations will largely go to the Democratic National Committee, followed by the Biden Fight Fund.
“There’s nothing obviously misleading about the Biden fundraising appeals because … all of that money can, and presumably would, be used for the post-election legal battles,” said Brendan Fischer, director of the federal reform program at Campaign Legal Center.
However, Fischer said the Trump campaign’s plan for the money is not the same.
“What’s different is that even though the Trump campaign has created a separate recount account and is citing the cost of post-election litigation in its fundraising appeals, for the most part, the money has gone towards paying down the campaign’s outstanding debt and now towards President Trump’s newly created leadership PAC,” Fischer explains.