U.S. Rep. Carlos Giménez enjoyed the support of unions, business associations and a multitude of his fellow Republicans while raising more than $260,000 in the first quarter of 2022 to defend his seat in Congress.
By the end of last month, the former Miami-Dade County Mayor had more than $1.2 million to fend off three challengers with significantly shallower pockets, according to his filings with the Federal Elections Commission.
Some 90 people gave to Giménez between Jan. 1 and March 31, with donations ranging from $15 to $5,800 — the upper limit of what candidates can accept from individual donors, equal to $2,900 each for the Primary and General elections.
Among his individual donors: Rex Barker, chief financial officer of South Florida real estate development firm J. Milton & Associates; Luis Castro, chief operating officer of Univista Insurance; Raymond and Rene Gonzalez, chief executive officer and CFO, respectively, of Transportation America; Robert Namoff, chair of security company Allied Universal; investor and financial executive Charles Schwab, chair of Charles Schwab Corp.; and Ryan Weston, CEO of the Florida Sugar Cane League.
Giménez's largest Q1 was a nearly $15,000 transfer from a joint fundraising committee to which he is party.
Many trade groups and labor organizations chipped in. Giménez, a former chief of the Miami Fire Department, received $5,000 from the International Assn of Firefighters. The National Electrical Contractors Association gave the same.
Build PAC, the lobbying arm of the National Association of Home Builders, donated $3,500. The Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of America gave $3,000.
He received $2,500 from political committees giving on behalf of the Auto Care Association, International Union of Operating Engineers, National Air Traffic Controllers Association and National Association of Letter Carriers.
The Associated General Contractors of America gave $1,500. Political committees backing the Allied Pilots Association, American Bankers Association and American Council of Engineering Companies chipped in $1,000 apiece.
More than 20 of Giménez's GOP compatriots in Congress gave to his campaign through associated leadership political action committees.
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy gave $5,800 through Take Back the House 2022. Minnesota U.S. Rep. Pete Stauber's Let's All Keep Electing Republicans and Wisconsin U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil's On Wisconsin PAC each gave $5,000.
Vern Buchanan, who represents Florida's 13th Congressional District, donated $3,500 through his associated political committee, Vote to Elect Republicans Now PAC.
Giménez also received $2,500 donations from political committees associated with Tom Emmer of Minnesota, Richard Hudson of North Carolina, Kevin Hern of Oklahoma; and Drew Ferguson of Georgia.
Mario Díaz-Balart, who has represented Florida's 25th Congressional District for 20 years, gave $2,000 through Maintaining All Republicans in Office PAC, as did U.S. Rep. French Hill of Arkansas through In the Arena PAC.
Other contributions came through the leadership PACs of Reps. Bill Johnson and David Joyce of Ohio, Debbie Lesko of Arizona, Brian Babin of Texas, Glenn Thompson of Pennsylvania, Tony Gonzalez of Texas, Nicole Malliotakis of New York, Robert Aderholt of Alabama, Ron Estes of Kansas, Iowa state Rep. Ashley Hinson and former U.S. Sen. George Lemieux.
Jay Collins, a who is running in Florida's 14th Congressional District, gave $1,500.
From the utility and energy sector, Giménez received $5,000 from The Williams Companies Inc., a Tula-based energy company, and $2,500 from Florida Power and Light parent NextEra Energy.
The Home Depot gave $5,000. So did the Wendy's Company.
Giménez accepted $1,000 each from political committees backing American Crystal Sugar Co., Minn-Dak Farmers Cooperative Sugar, the American Sugar Cane League and Western Sugar Cooperative.
Other contributions included $2,000 from Comcast/NBCUniversal and $1,000 from Gridiron PAC, the lobbying arm of the NFL.
His first-quarter spending came in just under $112,000. The preponderance of that went to consulting companies.
Giménez paid more than $18,000 to Coral Gables-based Columbus Strategies Inc. for a "fundraising commission."
He paid about $17,500 in "win bonuses" to Virginia-based public affairs firm Convergence Media and Indianapolis-headquartered Republican campaign company Limestone Strategies.
The Theodore Company in Virginia received more than $16,000 for "fundraising consulting." A.M. Strategies in Tampa got $10,000 for "strategy consulting."
Convert Digital, also in Virginia, took $9,000 for "digital consulting." Professional Data Services in Georgia got more than $8,000 for "compliance consulting."
Giménez paid $2,250 to cloud-based campaign management software company Aristotle.
His most well-funded opponent, Jeremiah Schaffer, appeared to take all of 2022's first quarter off. Schaffer neither raised nor spent a cent.
As of March 31, he held $30,000. Of that, $26,600 came from his own bank account.
Schaffer is a U.S. Navy veteran and current contractor working on military aircraft, according to his campaign website.
He's running on a platform to end government overspending, secure the U.S. border, reform Congress, protect gun ownership rights, broaden STEM education in public schools, boost workforce retraining, improve election integrity, enact America-first policies and employ a hands-off approach to people's family lives.
Ruth Swanson, the only woman in the race, is an English-language teacher to overseas students. She's lived in Miami since 2020, having previously lived in China and witnessing the Uyghur genocide, according to an interview she gave in November.
During that interview, Swanson said she was inspired to get involved in politics following the 2020 Election, which she described as "a thrown election" caused by "corruption," adding: "One of the things that I had realized from living in China is you can't trust your electronics, and a lot of what I had been doing before was social media activism."
Swanson raised about $8,000 through March 31. More than $5,000 of that was self-loaned. The remainder came from someone named Roger Swanson.
She spent more than $4,000. About half of that was for office space. Another $175 went to Project Veritas, an American far-right activist group that secretly records people and publishes deceptively edited video exposés of Democratic officials and media personnel.
Swanson's ledger also includes a $60 expenditure on "Systematic Deception," a documentary framing Democrats as a party oppressive to Black Americans.
The remainder of her spending was for web services, transportation, lodging, phone bills, postage, campaign materials and banking.
The fourth Republican candidate in the race, K.W. Miller, filed to run April 15 and has yet to file a campaign finance report.
In 2020, during his run as a no-party candidate for Florida's 18th Congressional District, he went viral on Twitter for multiple posts about Beyoncé, Patti LaBelle and George Soros.
"Beyoncé is not even African American. She is faking this for exposure," one tweet said. "Her real name is Ann Marie Lastrassi. She is Italian. This is all part of the Soros Deep State agenda for the Black Lives Matter Movement. BEYONCÉ YOU ARE ON NOTICE."
In other tweet, he called Beyoncé a "Marxist Deep State Operative who has no place in American pop culture," LaBelle "another Illuminati globalist puppet."
Later, he inquired as to what LaBelle knew about a "secret plan to reinstall Barack Obama as POTUS."
Miller ultimately secured 2.2% of the vote, far behind Democratic candidate Pam Keith and U.S. Rep. Brian Mast.
For now, Giménez represents CD 26, which covers all of Monroe County and southwest Miami-Dade, has alternated blue and red since it was created in 2013 to reflect the 2010 Census.
Democrat Joe Garcia held the seat until 2015, when Republican Carlos Curbelo defeated him. Then Democrat Debbie Mucarsel-Powell unseated Curbelo in 2019. She lost to Giménez in November 2020 by 3.4 percentage points.
Based on a redistricting map by Gov. Ron DeSantis that the Legislature passed this month, the district will be renumbered to Florida's 28th Congressional District while covering generally the same area.
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