Ocasio Cortez Pac

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For bucking a key arm of the Democratic Party establishment that has stood in the way of attracting and supporting progressive candidates, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) received applause over the weekend after she announced the launch of a new political action committee designed to directly challenge the power of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee by helping insurgent, left-leaning challengers like herself take on both Republican incumbents and centrist Democrats.

'The rumors are true,' Ocasio-Cortez tweeted Saturday. 'Today we're announcing the Courage to Change PAC—and we need your help. We are pushing the envelope in D.C. by rewarding those who reject lobbyist money, fight for working families, and welcome newcomers.'

Ocasio-cortez Pac Money

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) decried a GOP PAC ad that aired during the Democrat debate Thursday evening. She called the ad, which targeted her socialist ideas, “violent,” “false,” and a “love letter to the GOP’s white supremacist case.” The New Faces of the GOP ran a 30-second ad targeting Ocasio-Cortez’s socialist ideas. Ocasio-Cortez confirmed the report: “DCCC made clear that they will blacklist any org that helps progressive candidates like me. I can choose not to fund that kind of exclusion,” she wrote. Then-candidate Ocasio-Cortez was a board member at Justice Democrats PAC until June 2018. A report from the Washington Examiner says that she was still with the organization at the time of the alleged financial misdeeds.

Ocasio cortez in bathing suit

'What we're looking to do is to make sure that progressive candidates and incumbents have the support that they need to back policies that are going to improve the lives of everyday Americans.'
—Corbin Trent, Courage to Change PAC
According to the PACs first fundraising push:

When community leaders, activists, and working-class candidates try to run for office, organizations like the DCCC discourage them. These potential progressive leaders are asked: 'Can you raise $300,000 from your friends and family? If not, don't bother trying.'

We're stuck in this situation because there has been a structural effort to keep people like Alexandria, and people like you, out of power. But today, that changes.

HuffPost's Daniel Marans, the first to report on the new PAC, noted:

Ocasio-Cortez is taking steps to mount an independent political operation capable of rivaling the establishment party organs with which she has jousted. The mere creation of a PAC to support other candidates ― an entity commonly known as a 'leadership PAC' ― is typically the type of endeavor limited to members of party leadership or other seasoned members of Congress.

The PAC expands her reach in more tangible ways as well. A PAC allows her to contribute a larger figure to candidates than she otherwise would be able to give. Candidates can give only up to $2,000 a year from their own campaign to another candidate per election cycle, but PACs can contribute up to $5,000 per election cycle. Since the primary and the general elections are considered separate cycles, she can transfer $10,000 to a candidate from the start of a primary to the close of a general election.

The move by the first-term congresswoman, a project rumored to be underway for months, is a bold challenge to the DCCC which angered many progressive lawmakers and activists when it announced last year a blacklist effort against campaign consulting firms and others who worked against its preferred candidates. In addition to launching the new PAC, Ocasio-Cortez is also withholding her annual $250,000 dues to the DCCC and explained why in a Friday afternoon tweet:

I give quite a bit to fellow Dems - we’ve fundraised over $300,000 for others (more than my “dues”), w/ over 50% going to swing seats.

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DCCC made clear that they will blacklist any org that helps progressive candidates like me. I can choose not to fund that kind of exclusion. https://t.co/qqwdwPAqek

— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) January 10, 2020

Alexandria Ocasio-cortez Pac Money

In an interview with Fox News, Ocasio-Cortez further defended her decision by saying, 'I don't see the sense in giving a quarter-million dollars to an organization that has clearly told people like me that we're not welcome.'

AOC's efforts to stand up the DCCC was championed by many of her fellow progressives:

The DCCC requires outrageous 'dues' while actively undermining primaries and working against grassroots progressive candidates. We've seen it firsthand. @AOC's candor and honesty is exactly what we need to see more of in Congress! #BlueNoMatterWhoWontDo#BrandNewCongresshttps://t.co/EI0How3uPe

— Brand New Congress (@BrandNew535) January 10, 2020

Many reasons @AOC is right not to “pay dues” to the DCCC. 1. It’s decisionmaking is opaque & undemocratic. 2. It’s a “pay for play” scam -the more Members give, the better their assignments) 3. They punish consultants who support challengers & only give “jobs” to their buddies pic.twitter.com/VtrmeFFtSN

— James J. Zogby (@jjz1600) January 11, 2020

The Washington Postreported Sunday afternoon that Courage to Change had raised more than $150,000 after approximately 24 hours of fundraising, money that would go directly to help progressive House candidates in the 2020 primaries and general election.

'There is a robust infrastructure set up to maintain and defend the Democratic majority, and to support moderate Democrats, and often that infrastructure is running against progressive in blue districts,' Corbin Trent, a former staffer for Ocasio-Cortez and now a spokesperson for the new PAC, told the Post. 'So what we're looking to do is to make sure that progressive candidates and incumbents have the support that they need to back policies that are going to improve the lives of everyday Americans.'

Alexandria Ocasio Cortez Parents Wealth

Alexandria ocasio-cortez pacCortezOcasio Cortez PacPac

In a tweet on Sunday, Ocasio-Cortez said, 'Thank you to everyone contributing to this effort so far—this is a big deal. Help us build a war chest to support progressive red-to-blue seats, bold incumbents, and newcomers to Congress alike.'