The National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC), Senate Republicans’ campaign arm, smoked its Democratic counterpart in the fundraising game for the first half of 2025.
The NRSC raked in $48.6 million during the first six months of the year, outraising the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC), which brought in roughly $40 million in contributions, by more than $8 million, according to Federal Election Commission (FEC) data. The NRSC’s fundraising haul comes as the 2026 Senate map could be the most expensive election cycle to date, and the Republican committee is working to ensure it is not swamped in cash by their Democratic counterpart, which traditionally has a fundraising edge.
The NRSC has raised $10 million more than the committee raised at this point in July 2023 during the previous election cycle, giving the Republican group a sizable war chest to expand the Senate Republican Conference’s majority of 53 seats.
Senate Republicans’ campaign arm will have to devote considerable resources to protecting seats in Maine, North Carolina, and Ohio. The group is also looking to flip seats held by retiring Democratic Sens. Gary Peters of Michigan and Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire.
The NRSC is also targeting incumbent Democratic Georgia Sen. Jon Ossoff, who is running for reelection in a state that President Donald Trump carried in November.
“Chairman Scott and the NRSC have started the cycle strong and maximized fundraising capabilities and efficiencies to ensure Senate Republicans have the resources to protect and grow their Majority for the entirety of President Trump’s term,” NRSC Communications Director Joanna Rodriguez said in a statement. “Together as one team, we will protect red seats and chase every opportunity to flip battleground seats in Georgia, Michigan, and New Hampshire so we can continue delivering prosperity and security for the American people.”
The NRSC’s substantial fundraising haul has allowed the committee to pay off a record amount of unpaid bills — roughly $26 million in debt and other expenses — at an earlier date than the committee did in 2023, despite beginning the year with less than $3 million in the bank, according to FEC data. During the previous election cycle, Senate Republicans’ campaign arm did not pay off its $20 million balance until the end of October, according to a committee spokesperson.
“Winning is expensive,” NRSC executive director Jennifer DeCasper wrote in a February memo, referring to the committee netting four seats to retake Senate control last election cycle.
The NRSC reported having $7.8 million in the bank at the end of June compared to the Democratic committee’s $13.5 million cash-on-hand. However, the committee reported just $2 million in loans in its most recent FEC filing compared to the DSCC’s $5.25 million balance.
A spokesperson for the NRSC said the committee has also expanded its fundraising base, netting more than 26,000 new donors this year. Ninety-nine percent of the contributions made to this NRSC have been under $200.
Other Republican campaign committees maintain significant fundraising advantages over their Democratic rivals during the first six months of the year.
The National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC), House Republicans’ campaign arm, outraised the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) by nearly $3 million during the first half of 2025, according to both committees’ FEC filings. House Republicans’ fundraising lead is the first time that the DCCC has trailed during the first six months of an election cycle since 2021.
“While House Republicans build a historical war chest to grow the majority, House Democrats are broke, divided, and hijacked by socialists,” NRCC spokesman Mike Marinella said in a statement. “Donors are slamming the brakes because they know this party is pathetic, aimless, and has no chance of taking back the majority.”
The Republican National Committee (RNC), led by Chairman Michael Whatley, reported a fundraising haul of $96.4 million during the first half of the year. The Democratic National Committee (DNC) raised just $69.2 million during the same fundraising period.
The DNC has notably been plagued with infighting since chair Ken Martin began helming the organization in February and has reportedly struggled to pay its bills due to a sharp drop-off in contributions from major donors.
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