Jump to content

The Trump Fundraising Scams Continue with the NRCC


Recommended Posts

The grift goes on and on and on and on . . .

April 7, 2021
 
Featured Image
 
 

Did you know that today is your last opportunity to sign up for Donald Trump’s new social network?

No?

Well then you must not be receiving the critical, exclusive updates from the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC).

Last week the New York Times dropped a bombshell report detailing the extent to which the Trump campaign had scammed its own supporters into providing them a nine-figure, interest-free loan. The crux of the grift was the Trump campaign’s deceptive email practices which, among other things, chose to make recurring donations the default setting for supporters who were lured in by the campaign’s hyperbolic and conspiratorial fundraising pitches.

As a result, elderly Trump supporters on fixed incomes had their bank accounts depleted, causing their rent and utilities checks to bounce. Altogether the Trump campaign had to refund $122 million in online donations from their own supporters who had been duped.

Score another one for the party of the working man.

Did you know that today is your last opportunity to sign up for Donald Trump’s new social network?

No?

Well then you must not be receiving the critical, exclusive updates from the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC).

 
The NRCC was admirably undeterred by this revelation.

On Tuesday afternoon the committee sent me the following text message:

Image-from-iOS-300x208.jpg

Ominous. But literally every single word in the text is untrue. (Except “Timothy.”)

Let’s break it down:

For starters, Donald Trump has not started a new social media site yet, he’s just talked about it. And if we learned anything from Infrastructure Week, the Trump healthcare plan, The Great, Beautiful Wall That Mexico Paid For, and his sacred landslide re-election victory, it’s that vaporware is Trump’s primary product.

But even if Trump Social does come into existence, the NRCC—which is a Republican party committee not affiliated with Donald Trump—would have no operating control or ability to sign people up for this private enterprise.

Which creates an ontological conundrum: Can an offer that doesn’t exist expire in 10 minutes? And finally: I promise you that the NRCC will in fact ask for my money again with another limited-time offer.

So the NRCC is offering early access to a product that you have to presume there will be a lot of demand for and just pocketing the cash for themselves while the user, who you have to assume was excited about Trump Twitter—not supporting some random House Republican’s re-election campaign—gets nothing but the bill.

Once you click on the link in this text spam, you’re taken to a landing page where you’re asked to make a contribution in order to be “the first to join” this nonexistent social media site—over which the NRCC has no control.

Image-from-iOS-2.jpg

Here, the NRCC now claims that it will match the contribution “5x.” Think about that for a moment: The NRCC says that if you give them $1, they’ll add another $5. But if you don’t give them a dollar, what are they going to with their $5? So this is a lie, too (a common one in political fundraising.)

But let’s keep going.

Next up we’re presented with two boxes that are pre-checked. The first makes the donation monthly recurring—the same gimmick that the Times exposed the Trump campaign for running to disastrous results. The second pre-checked box doubles your donation in order to grant you “Trump Patriot Status.”

Image-from-iOS-copy.jpg

And if you can believe it, there’s an even worse version of this running on the NRCC’s fundraising page, where they threaten to tell Trump that the reader is a “DEFECTOR” if they uncheck the box for recurring donations:

Screen-Shot-2021-04-07-at-9.07.04-AM-cop

I’m sure there’s some formal legal difference between the NRCC tricking someone into signing up for a nonexistent social media site—and then having a default box opting them in to both double their pledged amount and make it recurring—and the criminal advance-fee scams made famous by the imaginary Nigerian princes.

But as a moral matter, the difference is awfully hard to suss out.


 

Tim Miller

Tim Miller is The Bulwark’s writer-at-large. He was previously political director for Republican Voters Against Trump, communications director for Jeb Bush 2016, and spokesman for the Republican National Committee.
 

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Trump is making money the way he always has - scam artist.   Only now the NRCC is getting in on it.

Edited by homersapien
  • Like 1
  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites





I don't know whether to feel guilt at seeing so many gullible, stupid people being scammed by obviously deceptive practices or to laugh at the fact that all these people were scammed by a reality tv star that has spent his entire life scamming everyone around him. From banks, the US government, wives, friends, Trump University, etc, the guy has spent his whole life defrauding and cheating everyone around him for his own benefit, yet somehow he became one of the most beloved and trusted people on earth to a large number of US conservatives, who then are willing to dump millions of dollars into the lap of a self described "billionaire" believing he was going to use their money to better the country in some way or fashion...i don't know.

 

Like they say, there's a sucker born every minute...and most of them obviously vote Republican. 

  • Love 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...