- Political party committee
In the
United States , political party committees are organizations, officially affiliated with apolitical party and registered with theFederal Elections Commission (FEC), which raise and spend money forpolitical campaign ing. They are not to be confused withpolitical action committee s, which are formally independent of political parties and subject to different rules.Though their own internal rules differ, the two major political parties (Democrats and Republicans) have essentially parallel sets of committees. (Third parties have varied organizational structures, although several do have national committees officially recognized by the FEC.)
National committees
The
Democratic National Committee ,Green National Committee ,Libertarian National Committee , andRepublican National Committee are the official central organizations for their respective parties. They have the greatest role in presidential election years when they are responsible for planning the nominating convention and also spend heavily in support of their party's nominee (some of this spending is directly coordinated with the nominee's campaign; the rest is inindependent expenditure s).The two major parties also have two national
Hill committee s, controlled by their caucus leadership in each house of Congress, which work specifically to elect members of their own party to Congress.The individual contribution limit to a single national party committee is currently $26,700 per calendar year, but is indexed to inflation.
tate and local committees
State party organizations typically have both federal and non-federal accounts, and money can be transferred between the two under certain circumstances. (A third and more complicated category of money,
Levin funds , has been created by theBipartisan Campaign Reform Act .) The federal limit for individual contributions to state and local party committees is a combined total of $10,000 per year.ee also
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Politics of the United States
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