How political party can contribute in a conduction to democratic election?
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Contributions made by party committees
Contributions to influence federal elections are subject to the limits (and prohibitions) of the Federal Election Campaign Act. A contribution that exceeds the limits is a violation of the Act.
Types of contributions
The contributions made by a political party committee commonly take the form of:
Gifts of money, including the full purchase price of fundraising items or tickets to fundraisers;
In-kind contributions (gifts of goods or services);
Loans (other than bank loans); and
Guarantees and endorsements of bank loans.
Affiliation
Party committees within one state are generally subject to the state party’s limitson contributions received and made.
Limits on contributions to candidates
As a general rule, the limits on contributions to federal candidates and candidate committees apply separately to each election in which a candidate participates—primary, runoff or general.
$2,700 per election
For elections held during the 2017-2018 election cycle, a committee may contribute up to $2,700 to a candidate, per election, unless it has qualified as a multicandidate committee.
$5,000 per election: Multicandidate status
A multicandidate committee may contribute up to $5,000 per candidate, per election.
National committee’s $47,400 limit for Senate candidates
For elections held in the 2017-2018 election cycle, a national party committee is entitled to contribute up to $47,400 to a U.S. Senate candidate. Unlike the per-election limits, this limit applies to contributions made during the entire campaign period (e.g., the primary and general elections). The Democratic and Republican national committees share this limit with their parties’ national Senate campaign committees.
Contribution limits for 2017–2018 federal elections
RecipientCandidate committeePAC† (SSF and nonconnected)Party committee: state/district/localParty committee: nationalAdditional national party committee accounts‡DonorIndividual$2,700* per election$5,000 per year$10,000 per year (combined)$33,900* per year$101,700* per account, per yearCandidate committee$2,000 per election$5,000 per yearUnlimited transfersUnlimited transfersPAC: multicandidate$5,000 per election$5,000 per year$5,000 per year (combined)$15,000 per year$45,000 per account, per yearPAC: nonmulticandidate$2,700* per election$5,000 per year$10,000 per year (combined)$33,900* per year$101,700* per account, per yearParty committee: state/district/local$5,000 per election$5,000 per yearUnlimited transfersUnlimited transfersParty committee: national$5,000 per election**$5,000 per yearUnlimited transfersUnlimited transfers
* Indexed for inflation in odd-numbered years.
† “PAC” here refers to a committee that makes contributions to other federal political committees. Independent-expenditure-only political committees (sometimes called “Super PACs”) may accept unlimited contributions, including from corporationsand labor organizations.
‡ The limits in this column apply to a national party committee’s accounts for: (i) the presidential nominating convention; (ii) election recounts and contests and other legal proceedings; and (iii) national party headquarters buildings. A party’s national committee, Senate campaign committee and House campaign committee are each considered separate national party committees with separate limits. Only a national party committee, not the parties’ national congressional campaign committees, may have an account for the presidential nominating convention.
**Additionally, a national party committee and its Senatorial campaign committee may contribute up to $47,400 combined per campaign to each Senate candidate.
Multicandidate status
A political committee becomes a multicandidate committee—with its higher per-candidate contribution limit—when it:
Has been registered as a political committee for at least six months;Receives contributions (of any amount) from at least 51 contributors; andMakes contributions (of any amount) to at least five federal candidates.
There is no time limit for satisfying the second and third criteria.
A state party committee becomes a multicandidate committee when it satisfies the first two criteria.
Qualifying by affiliation
A party committee that is affiliated with a qualified multicandidate committee automatically shares that committee’s $5,000 per candidate, per election contribution limit (since affiliated committees share the same limits on contributions received and made).
hope it helps u
An official website of the United States Government 
Search
Search
Menu
HomeCampaign finance dataHelp for candidates and committeesLegal resourcesAbout
MenuFederal Election Commission | United States of America
Contributions made by party committees
Contributions to influence federal elections are subject to the limits (and prohibitions) of the Federal Election Campaign Act. A contribution that exceeds the limits is a violation of the Act.
Types of contributions
The contributions made by a political party committee commonly take the form of:
Gifts of money, including the full purchase price of fundraising items or tickets to fundraisers;
In-kind contributions (gifts of goods or services);
Loans (other than bank loans); and
Guarantees and endorsements of bank loans.
Affiliation
Party committees within one state are generally subject to the state party’s limitson contributions received and made.
Limits on contributions to candidates
As a general rule, the limits on contributions to federal candidates and candidate committees apply separately to each election in which a candidate participates—primary, runoff or general.
$2,700 per election
For elections held during the 2017-2018 election cycle, a committee may contribute up to $2,700 to a candidate, per election, unless it has qualified as a multicandidate committee.
$5,000 per election: Multicandidate status
A multicandidate committee may contribute up to $5,000 per candidate, per election.
National committee’s $47,400 limit for Senate candidates
For elections held in the 2017-2018 election cycle, a national party committee is entitled to contribute up to $47,400 to a U.S. Senate candidate. Unlike the per-election limits, this limit applies to contributions made during the entire campaign period (e.g., the primary and general elections). The Democratic and Republican national committees share this limit with their parties’ national Senate campaign committees.
Contribution limits for 2017–2018 federal elections
RecipientCandidate committeePAC† (SSF and nonconnected)Party committee: state/district/localParty committee: nationalAdditional national party committee accounts‡DonorIndividual$2,700* per election$5,000 per year$10,000 per year (combined)$33,900* per year$101,700* per account, per yearCandidate committee$2,000 per election$5,000 per yearUnlimited transfersUnlimited transfersPAC: multicandidate$5,000 per election$5,000 per year$5,000 per year (combined)$15,000 per year$45,000 per account, per yearPAC: nonmulticandidate$2,700* per election$5,000 per year$10,000 per year (combined)$33,900* per year$101,700* per account, per yearParty committee: state/district/local$5,000 per election$5,000 per yearUnlimited transfersUnlimited transfersParty committee: national$5,000 per election**$5,000 per yearUnlimited transfersUnlimited transfers
* Indexed for inflation in odd-numbered years.
† “PAC” here refers to a committee that makes contributions to other federal political committees. Independent-expenditure-only political committees (sometimes called “Super PACs”) may accept unlimited contributions, including from corporationsand labor organizations.
‡ The limits in this column apply to a national party committee’s accounts for: (i) the presidential nominating convention; (ii) election recounts and contests and other legal proceedings; and (iii) national party headquarters buildings. A party’s national committee, Senate campaign committee and House campaign committee are each considered separate national party committees with separate limits. Only a national party committee, not the parties’ national congressional campaign committees, may have an account for the presidential nominating convention.
**Additionally, a national party committee and its Senatorial campaign committee may contribute up to $47,400 combined per campaign to each Senate candidate.
Multicandidate status
A political committee becomes a multicandidate committee—with its higher per-candidate contribution limit—when it:
Has been registered as a political committee for at least six months;Receives contributions (of any amount) from at least 51 contributors; andMakes contributions (of any amount) to at least five federal candidates.
There is no time limit for satisfying the second and third criteria.
A state party committee becomes a multicandidate committee when it satisfies the first two criteria.
Qualifying by affiliation
A party committee that is affiliated with a qualified multicandidate committee automatically shares that committee’s $5,000 per candidate, per election contribution limit (since affiliated committees share the same limits on contributions received and made).
hope it helps u
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