Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-CortezAlexandria Ocasio-CortezAttorney says 75-year-old man shoved by Buffalo police suffered brain injury How language is bringing down Donald Trump Highest-circulation Kentucky newspaper endorses Charles Booker in Senate race MORE (D-N.Y.) closed out 2018 with nearly $370,000 in cash on hand, according to her latest filing with the Federal Election Commission (FEC).
Ocasio-Cortez raised just short of $70,000 between Nov. 27 and Dec. 31, the filing shows. That haul was largely boosted by some $43,000 in small-dollar contributions, a sign of her grass-roots fundraising appeal.
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Among the largest contributions Ocasio-Cortez received in December was a $2,000 transfer from House Majority Leader Steny HoyerSteny Hamilton HoyerOvernight Health Care: US showing signs of retreat in battle against COVID-19 | Regeneron begins clinical trials of potential coronavirus antibody treatment | CMS warns nursing homes against seizing residents’ stimulus checks Hoyer: House will vote soon on bill to improve ObamaCare Hoyer: Infrastructure package to hit floor this month MORE’s (D-Md.) campaign committee, and a handful of $1,000 contributions from individual donors, the filings show.
The first-term lawmaker’s year-end fundraising haul comes as some Democrats raise the prospect of fielding a primary challenge against Ocasio-Cortez, who has rankled some in the party’s establishment wing by aligning herself with a group calling to primary incumbent Democrats.
The group, Justice Democrats, helped fuel Ocasio-Cortez’s insurgent bid against former Rep. Joseph Crowley (D-N.Y.) last year. Her eventual victory in that race rattled the political establishment and handed Ocasio-Cortez a kind of rock star status in the progressive movement.
Justice Democrats announced its first primary target of the 2020 cycle earlier this month, putting out a call for candidates to challenge Rep. Henry Cuellar (D-Texas) in Texas’s 28th District.
Despite recent chatter of a primary challenge to Ocasio-Cortez, the 29-year-old has gained an outsize following among progressives and sweeping national visibility, which could parlay itself into funding for a potentially contested reelection bid.
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