Chuck Darwin<p>A shady new super PAC named for Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg<br> just spent nearly $20 million on efforts to help Donald Trump appear more moderate on abortion, <br>but the group won’t reveal where its money comes from until after the election.</p><p>The pro-Trump RBG PAC <br>(a massive insult to the late justice, who hated Trump) <br>is attempting to use the liberal justice’s legacy to try and boost Trump ahead of the election. </p><p>Its website even features photos of Ginsberg and the former president, captioned “Great Minds Think Alike.”</p><p>Two advertisements produced by the RBG PAC emphasized Trump’s statements claiming that he would not support a federal abortion ban. </p><p>The PAC revealed Friday that it had spent $19,976,000 on digital media, text messages, and printing or postage, according to a disclosure to the Federal Elections Commission. <br>The majority of that cash, a whopping $17.3 million, was spent on digital media. </p><p>It’s unclear who exactly is funding RBG PAC. <br>The group registered on October 16, which was the last day of the final filing period before Election Day, <br>according to The New York Times. <br>Any group active at that time would have had to disclose its donors and vendors, but RBG PAC’s contributors still remain a mystery. </p><p>Every cent was paid to a company called Western Creative Group LLC, <br>a Wyoming-based company with no digital footprint. <br>Political reporter Roger Sollenberger noted in a post on X that the company had <br>“never been paid by a federal committee before; principals hidden behind a corporate agent; no online footprint whatsoever.”</p><p>Forms for the PAC’s expenditures were signed by <a href="https://c.im/tags/May" class="mention hashtag" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">#<span>May</span></a> <a href="https://c.im/tags/Mailman" class="mention hashtag" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">#<span>Mailman</span></a>, one of Trump’s former legal advisers. <br>While in the White House, Mailman worked in the chief of staff’s office and the staff secretary’s office. </p><p>After her turn in the Trump administration, Mailman served as the vice president of "Restoring Integrity and Trust in Elections", a Republican-led nonprofit organization that challenges what it views as violations to election law. <br>She’s currently the director of the "Independent Women’s Law Center". <br>During an appearance on CNN earlier this week, <br>Mailman defended Elon Musk’s scheme to randomly give out $1 million to registered voters who sign his “constitutional petition,” <br>a scheme that earned him a warning from the DOJ. <br>Mailman said Musk’s stunt was just to get “attention” and that “creativity is warranted in elections.”</p><p><a href="https://newrepublic.com/post/187575/donald-trump-super-pac-skirt-campaign-rules" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" translate="no" target="_blank"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">newrepublic.com/post/187575/do</span><span class="invisible">nald-trump-super-pac-skirt-campaign-rules</span></a></p>