DNC Forced To Take Out Loan to Finance Midterms As Donations Fall Off Cliff
The Democratic National Committee (DNC) has secured a substantial loan in preparation for next year’s midterm elections, as the party struggles with leadership and has little to demonstrate for its government shutdown efforts. On Thursday, Politico reported on a filing the party mady with the Federal Election Commission concerning the $15 million loan.

“The national party committee framed the line of credit as an early investment to boost its candidates in New Jersey and Virginia earlier this month, and help build up state parties ahead of next year’s midterms. But the need for a loan still puts the DNC in sharp contrast with its GOP counterpart, the Republican National Committee, which was sitting on $86 million at the end of September,” the outlet said.
Politico noted the organization had taken out loans in the past, “although usually not this early in the cycle or of this magnitude all at once.”
The DNC reportedly spent over $15 million in 2025 to cover former Vice President Kamala Harris’s presidential campaign expenses. Harris and her running mate, Governor Tim Walz (D-MN), lost to President Donald Trump in the 2024 election. The additional expenditure came after Harris’ campaign blew through about $1.5 billion in donations.
By comparison, President Trump over the summer touted how well the Republican Party was doing in terms of finances and donations.
“The Republican Party is doing really well. Millions of people have joined us in our quest to MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN. We won every aspect of the Presidential Election and, based on the great success we are having, are poised to WIN BIG IN THE MIDTERMS,” he wrote on Truth Social.
“We have raised far more money than the Democrats, and are having a great time fixing all of the Country-Destroying mistakes made by the Biden Administration, and watching the USA heal and prosper,” the president added.
The fundraising shortfalls are also hitting individual Democrats.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s fundraising, for instance, has slowed to a near standstill, sparking fresh speculation that he could face a serious primary challenge from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in 2026, Conservative Brief reported last month.
Federal Election Commission filings show the five-term New York Democrat raised just $133,000 during the last quarter — a sharp drop from his typical multi-million-dollar hauls and less than half of what he raised during the same period in his last election cycle, The New York Post reported.
The slowdown comes as Ocasio-Cortez, 36, raked in $4.5 million for her House reelection campaign during the same three-month period. The Bronx and Queens congresswoman has refused to rule out a Senate run — or even a future presidential bid — raising concerns inside Democratic circles that she may soon target Schumer directly.
Schumer’s campaign spent more than it raised from July through September, shelling out $322,000 while pulling in less than half that amount
The 74-year-old lawmaker’s latest report shows just $133,000 in new receipts compared to the $337,000 he raised in the same period ahead of his 2022 race. By contrast, during the final quarter before that election, Schumer brought in nearly $6 million for his campaign and helped direct a record-breaking $119 million into the Senate Majority PAC.
While he still has $8.6 million cash on hand, that total trails Ocasio-Cortez’s reported $11.8 million — an unusual reversal for the longtime Senate leader known for his prolific fundraising operation.
“There’s a big political and financial upside to being bold and capturing energy, and in this moment that accrues to AOC, not Chuck Schumer,” said Adam Green, co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee. “He cannot avoid noticing that AOC is the kind of person inspiring people and therefore getting fundraising benefit.”
Schumer’s decline in donations has raised eyebrows among Democratic strategists and donors who have long viewed him as one of the party’s most effective fundraisers. His past success has relied heavily on support from Wall Street, lawyers, and real estate interests — three industries that have historically powered his leadership PAC.
Hakeem Jeffries Takes Aim at Supreme Court Over Trump

In the ebb and flow of American politics, few institutions stand as tall—or as contested—as the United States Supreme Court. Over the years, it has been both a guardian of constitutional rights and a lightning rod for political controversy. Its rulings have reshaped social norms, redrawn the boundaries of federal power, and defined the limits of presidential authority. But in recent months, the Court has found itself thrust into a new storm of criticism, this time not from the usual chorus of partisan pundits, but from the highest levels of Democratic Party leadership.

On Monday evening, during a live interview on CNN’s The Situation Room, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) delivered one of his sharpest rebukes yet of the Court’s conservative majority. His words reflected not only his personal frustration but also a growing unease within the Democratic caucus about what they see as a judiciary increasingly aligned with former President Donald Trump.
Jeffries accused the Supreme Court of having “enabled” Trump to behave like a monarch, granting him broad immunities that, in Jeffries’ view, stand in stark contradiction to the vision of the nation’s founders. His remarks sparked a flurry of reactions, highlighting once again how the nation’s political and judicial branches are locked in a tense and consequential struggle.
Jeffries’ Explosive Remarks
Speaking with CNN host Wolf Blitzer, Jeffries did not mince words. He argued that the Supreme Court’s recent decisions had effectively given Trump what the framers of the Constitution most feared: unchecked power.
“You know, one thing to understand,” Jeffries said, “is that for those who are flirting with the Trump administration, or doing its bidding, or engaging in its pay-to-play schemes, the statute of limitations is five years. Donald Trump and this toxic administration will eventually be gone. But accountability will remain. That process begins now but will not be complete until there is truly independent oversight, whether through the Department of Justice or a Democratic-controlled House of Representatives.”
The statement was not merely an attack on Trump. It was also a critique of the system that, in Jeffries’ view, has shielded him. Jeffries specifically pointed to the Supreme Court’s decision granting Trump partial presidential immunity, a ruling that has divided legal scholars and fueled political debate.
“The Department of Justice has historically stood as one of the great institutions of law enforcement in our country,” Jeffries continued. “But Donald Trump and his extremist allies have worked to erode its credibility. And let’s be clear: we must also hold the conservative justices of the Supreme Court accountable. They gave this president blanket presidential immunity in a nation where our founders explicitly rejected kingship. They’ve allowed Donald Trump to act like a king. Shame on them for what they’ve done to this country.”
The Context: Presidential Immunity and the Court’s Role
To understand the weight of Jeffries’ comments, it is important to revisit the recent history of the Supreme Court’s engagement with Trump-era legal questions.
The most controversial decision in this area came earlier this year, when the Court ruled in a landmark case that former presidents are entitled to a degree of presidential immunity for official acts taken while in office. While the ruling did not grant absolute immunity, critics—including Jeffries—argue that it created a shield broad enough to embolden Trump and discourage accountability.
The Court’s majority opinion stressed the need to preserve the independence of the executive branch, warning that subjecting presidents to endless lawsuits after leaving office could paralyze the institution. But dissenting voices, including Justice Sonia Sotomayor, warned that the decision risked turning presidents into “kings above the law.”
Jeffries seized on this dissent to underscore his point. For him and many Democrats, the Court has not simply interpreted the law—it has restructured the balance of power in Trump’s favor.
The Historical Tension Between Presidents and Kingship
Jeffries’ reference to America’s founders rejecting kingship is more than a rhetorical flourish. The framers of the Constitution were deeply concerned with the dangers of concentrated power. Having broken away from Britain’s monarchy, they sought to create a system of checks and balances that would prevent any single branch of government from dominating.
The presidency was designed to be powerful but accountable, constrained by Congress and the courts. For Jeffries, the Supreme Court’s decisions in recent years have eroded this balance, tilting power toward the executive in ways that echo the monarchy America once rejected.
A Broader Pattern of Criticism
Jeffries’ critique is not an isolated moment. It fits into a broader Democratic narrative that has taken shape since Trump’s return to the political stage. Many Democrats argue that the Court’s conservative majority—anchored by justices appointed by Trump himself—has too often sided with executive authority, voter suppression laws, or corporate interests at the expense of democratic accountability.
Consider the Court’s decisions on:
Election Law: Rulings that upheld restrictive voting measures in several states, which Democrats say disproportionately impact minority communities.
Campaign Finance: The expansion of corporate influence in politics through decisions like Citizens United v. FEC.
Abortion Rights: The overturning of Roe v. Wade, which Democrats cite as evidence of judicial activism aligned with conservative political goals.
For Jeffries, these rulings form a pattern—one in which the Court, rather than standing above politics, has become entangled in them.
Trump, the DOJ, and Allegations of Corruption
Jeffries also used the CNN interview to emphasize his belief that accountability for Trump will come, even if delayed. His comments about the “five-year statute of limitations” were a direct signal to those who may have cooperated with Trump’s administration in what Democrats describe as corrupt or self-serving schemes.
The Minority Leader suggested that once political winds shift—whether through a Democratic House majority or a change at the Department of Justice—those individuals could face consequences.
This is not an empty threat. History has shown that political accountability often lags behind the events themselves. Investigations can take years, and statutes of limitations create a ticking clock. By highlighting this timeline, Jeffries was reminding both Trump’s allies and the public that the story is far from over.
Conservative Pushback
Predictably, Jeffries’ comments drew immediate criticism from Republicans and conservative commentators. Many pointed out that even liberal justices have occasionally sided with the Trump administration on legal questions, complicating the narrative that the Court is uniformly pro-Trump.
Others argued that Jeffries’ rhetoric risks undermining public confidence in the judiciary at a time when trust in democratic institutions is already fragile. To conservatives, the accusation that the Court is enabling authoritarianism smacks of partisan sour grapes, particularly given the Court’s occasional rulings against Trump’s interests during his presidency.
Still, Jeffries’ remarks resonate with a Democratic base that views the Court as deeply compromised.
Public Reaction and the Larger Debate
The broader public reaction has mirrored the nation’s political divisions. On social media, clips of Jeffries’ interview spread rapidly, with Democrats applauding his candor and Republicans denouncing his attack on the Court. Legal scholars offered more nuanced takes, debating the long-term implications of the immunity ruling and whether it truly represented a dangerous expansion of executive power.
For many ordinary Americans, however, the issue boils down to a simpler question: Should presidents be held accountable like everyone else, or does the office require special protections? Jeffries’ forceful critique brings that question into sharp relief.
A Fight Over the Future of Democracy
At its core, Jeffries’ attack on the Supreme Court reflects a larger struggle over how democracy itself is defined in the 21st century. Is democracy simply the will of the voters expressed through elections, or does it require ongoing checks on power, even after a president leaves office?
For Jeffries and his Democratic colleagues, the latter view is essential. They argue that without robust oversight, presidents—especially one as polarizing as Trump—can exploit their office to the detriment of the republic. For Republicans, by contrast, the Court’s rulings are seen as necessary to prevent endless legal harassment of presidents, which could deter future leaders from making bold decisions.
Conclusion: A Warning and a Challenge
Hakeem Jeffries’ comments on CNN were not merely an outburst of frustration. They were a warning—that unchecked power, enabled by judicial decisions, could push the United States closer to the kind of authoritarianism its founders fought to escape.
Whether one agrees with Jeffries or not, his remarks highlight the stakes of the current political moment. The debate over Trump, presidential immunity, and the role of the Supreme Court is not just about one man or one administration. It is about the future balance of power in America and whether the nation can sustain its commitment to the principle that no one—not even a president—is above the law.
As Jeffries put it, “Shame on them for what they’ve done to this country.” His words may divide opinion, but they also ensure that the conversation about the Court, Trump, and accountability is far from over.