The Conservative Americans PAC has financed a series of outside efforts tied to multiple primary election races in which they tried to elevate weaker Democrat candidates over their stronger primary opponents.
The group participated in contests across Nebraska’s 2nd District, Pennsylvania’s 7th, Texas’ 35th, New Jersey’s 7th, and Maine’s 2nd District, including working alongside affiliated political action committees (PACs) such as Lead Left PAC and Real Change PAC, according to documents obtained by the Daily Caller. Conservative Americans PAC admits it aimed to influence Democrat primary elections, boosting weaker Democrat candidates for the benefit of Republicans in November’s general election.
NEW: House Majority PAC, which has huge ad reservations in #ME02, signals it still plans to spend there now that Dunlap is the nominee
Spox: “Paul LePage has made a career out of defunding health care and cutting Medicaid — and we look forward to ensuring he loses in November.” https://t.co/01JakZT1Xa
— Andrew Solender (@AndrewSolender) June 19, 2026
Since its founding in 2022, Conservative Americans PAC says it has directed millions of dollars toward supporting a range of affiliated political efforts nationwide, including activity in the Texas and Kentucky Senate races, Republican primaries in several states, and the 2024 cycle focused on shaping GOP primary outcomes following the removal of former Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy. (RELATED: GOP Spending Groups Race Ahead Of Democrat Rivals In Fundraising)
The organization also pushed back on its characterization as “McCarthy-linked,” saying it has been inaccurately labeled as such because of its involvement in those races. It states that former Speaker McCarthy has no affiliation with the group, its activities, or its funder, Americans for Prosperity Alliance (APA). Under federal law, APA is not required to disclose its donors or funding sources.
Conservative Americans PAC has focused negative messaging in Democrat primaries on issues such as a candidate’s support for ICE abolition, Medicare for All, and opposition to President Donald Trump. In effect, these negative ads serve to boost more radical Democrat candidates in an appeal to more ideologically pure Democrat primary voters.
The group’s approach appears to be based on the belief that more radical positions popular with Democrat primary voters can make candidates less competitive in a general election, as some operatives see it. Several other affiliated groups run campaign ads with the opposite objective, using a candidate’s proximity to pro-Trump policies — for instance — to undermine their support in a Democratic primary.
Across the five races examined, outside groups collectively spent about $18.1 million, according to the documents. Of that total, Lead Left PAC and Real Change PAC accounted for roughly $4.3 million, though neither was the largest outside spender in any individual contest.
Spokeswoman for Conservative Americans PAC, Samantha Bullock, wrote to the Caller, “After over a decade of Democrats meddling in our primaries and with radical politicians ascending in the Democrat Party, Republicans are evening the playing field. To quote Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, ‘These clowns have been playing checkers, and we’re going to continue to play three-dimensional chess.’”
In Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District, Lead Left PAC spent $435,225 opposing Democratic state Sen. John Cavanaugh, framing him as a candidate who would align with President Donald Trump over fellow Democrats. The effort coincided with Denise Powell’s victory in the primary.
Meanwhile, actual Democrat-aligned groups including the Congressional Progressive Caucus PAC and Progressive Promise spent roughly $400,000 supporting Cavanaugh.
In Maine’s 2nd Congressional District, a similar dynamic unfolded. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC)-backed candidate, Democrat Maine state Sen. Joe Baldacci, was defeated in the Democratic primary after ranked-choice tabulation, underscoring how outside spending shaped multiple contests across the cycle.
The race drew attention amid ongoing speculation about outside groups attempting to shape primary outcomes by supporting candidates whom some operatives view as less competitive in a general election context. (RELATED: EXCLUSIVE: Trump Aligned Group Drops Six Figures On ‘Talafreako’ Ad In Texas)
Following the final count, State Auditor Matt Dunlap secured the nomination. Inside Elections later rated the district “Likely Republican,” underscoring the perceived general-election environment as the dust settled from the primary.
BREAKING |
Matthew Dunlap has won the Democratic Maine CD-02 primary after the ranked choice tabulation. Inside Elections rating: Likely Republican.
— Jacob Rubashkin (@JacobRubashkin) June 19, 2026

