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How much total has AIPAC and its affiliated PACs donated to Marjorie Taylor Greene since 2018?
Executive summary
Available reporting in the provided sources does not give a single, confirmed total of contributions from AIPAC or “AIPAC-affiliated PACs” to Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene since 2018; some trackers list donations and OpenSecrets groups aggregate “pro‑Israel” contributions but none in the set give a definitive dollar sum to Greene from AIPAC or its formal PACs (not found in current reporting) [1] [2] [3]. Independent trackers such as “Track AIPAC” and major databases like OpenSecrets and FollowTheMoney are referenced in recent coverage of Greene’s feud with AIPAC, but the sources here do not state a precise cumulative figure [1] [2] [4] [3].
1. What the specific sources in this packet say about donations to Greene
Track AIPAC’s summary pages are cited in media and list donation figures to members of Congress in some cases, but the particular snippet shown here does not provide a clear, sourced total for Marjorie Taylor Greene from AIPAC itself in the results supplied — it shows donation data for representatives generally but the exact Greene figure and methodology are not present in the excerpted text [1]. OpenSecrets’ candidate page for Greene explains that organizations themselves often do not donate directly — contributions usually come from affiliated PACs, employees, or individuals — but the excerpt in this set does not include a line-item total of AIPAC or AIPAC-affiliated PAC giving to Greene since 2018 [2]. FollowTheMoney and aggregated “Pro‑Israel Recipients” listings are present in the search set and show Greene among recipients of pro‑Israel industry money, but the materials provided here do not include a precise cumulative dollar figure attributing donations to AIPAC or named AIPAC PACs specifically [4] [3].
2. Why it’s hard to produce a single “AIPAC total” from these sources
AIPAC proper is a 501(c)[5] organization that, as OpenSecrets notes, does not typically donate directly to candidates in the same way a federal PAC does; money associated with an organization often flows through separate political action committees, individual members, employees, or donors, complicating a neat “AIPAC gave X dollars” accounting unless one disaggregates dozens of entries [2]. Databases like OpenSecrets and FollowTheMoney require mapping multiple entities — AIPAC itself, affiliated PACs, and individual donors connected to those organizations — and the source excerpts provided here don’t include that disaggregation for Greene [2] [4].
3. What journalists have reported in this packet about Greene and AIPAC
Several of the supplied items document a political feud between Greene and AIPAC in 2025, including mutual fundraising blasts and public criticism: The Hill, Haaretz, and other outlets detail AIPAC criticizing Greene and Greene assailing AIPAC as a foreign‑lobby influence, but these stories discuss political conflict and fundraising rhetoric rather than reporting a verified cumulative donation total from AIPAC/PACs to Greene since 2018 [6] [7]. Fox News’ coverage referenced an AIPAC tracker graphic indicating AIPAC had “not given her any donations” in a particular context, but that single claim is cited in a news story and the underlying dataset or time frame isn’t reproduced here [8].
4. How one would reliably calculate a total if you wanted to proceed
To compile an authoritative total you would need to: (a) define which entities count as “AIPAC‑affiliated PACs”; (b) query OpenSecrets, FEC filings, and FollowTheMoney for every contribution to Marjorie Taylor Greene from those exact entity names and associated individuals for each cycle since 2018; and (c) sum the cycle‑level and independent expenditure entries while documenting methodology. The sources here point to those databases as the right instruments, but none of the snippets provide the finished sum [2] [4] [3].
5. Conflicting signals and why readers should be cautious
Public discussion mixes direct AIPAC activity, pro‑Israel industry contributions, and political messaging. For example, Track AIPAC and media graphics are sometimes used in political arguments (one snippet shows a graphic claiming AIPAC “had not given her any donations”) while other outlets note AIPAC‑style or pro‑Israel industry money lists that include Greene — without the packet’s sources agreeing on a dollar amount [1] [8] [3]. That creates space for selective presentation: critics can point to a lack of direct AIPAC PAC giving, while others can highlight pro‑Israel donor networks that have given to multiple lawmakers including Greene [2] [3].
6. Bottom line and next steps
Available sources in this set do not provide a single verified total of donations from AIPAC or AIPAC‑affiliated PACs to Marjorie Taylor Greene since 2018; to answer definitively you must consult the full OpenSecrets, FEC, and FollowTheMoney records and clearly define which entities you treat as “AIPAC‑affiliated” before summing contributions [2] [4] [3]. If you want, I can draft the exact search plan and the entity list you’d need to pull from OpenSecrets/FEC/FollowTheMoney so you — or I, with access to those databases — can compute a precise dollar figure.