I can’t browse right now, but I can summarize what’s publicly reported up to the last date I’m aware of and guide you to the latest sources. Would you like a quick summary with caveats and next steps to verify?Here’s a concise update based on recent reporting up to mid-2026, with guidance on how to verify the latest details.
Core update
- Thomas Massie’s campaign has used “Moneybomb” fundraising events to mobilize support and raise funds for his re-election bid in Kentucky. Reports in 2026 describe one- to multi-million-dollar online fundraising pushes tied to specific weeks, including a notable $1M+ tally in early May 2026 from a Moneybomb event. This aligns with his ongoing primary contest against Ed Gallrein, a Trump-backed challenger.[1][3]
Context and sources you can check for the latest:
- Fox News coverage from May 2026 tracks Massie’s Moneybomb fundraising performance and frames the race as a test of Massie’s stance against the Trump-backed challenger. This piece cites real-time fundraising tallies and quotes from Massie’s campaign.[3][1]
- The Associated Press and other outlets (mid-2025 to mid-2026) have previously noted Massie’s fundraising strength and the involvement of a Trump-aligned effort to oppose him, including separate fundraising figures and campaign finance context. For instance, early 2025 reporting highlighted more than $1.7M in available funds and the strategic response from Trump-allied groups.[2]
- Additional outlets and independent channels have continued to cover the Moneybomb phenomenon for Massie in 2026, including campaign pages and video content promoting the fundraising push. Use his campaign site and aggregator pieces to see updates, totals, and endorsements.[5][10]
How to verify the latest
- Check Massie’s official campaign site and local Kentucky political news outlets for the current Moneybomb totals, candidate comments, and fundraising week-by-week tallies.[7][10]
- Look for coverage from national political outlets (AP, Fox News, Washington Times, etc.) around the dates of the Moneybombs (e.g., March, May 2026) for the latest fundraising numbers and the status of the primary contest.[4][1][2]
- Watch campaign finance filings and the Federal Election Commission (FEC) reports for exact dollar amounts, sources, and committees involved in the Moneybomb events.[7]
If you’d like, I can pull the newest publicly reported totals and summarize how the Moneybomb has progressed over the last few weeks, with direct quotes and citations to the specific articles.