He shares a modest, but notable — with No. 2, as President Donald Trump continues to stockpile cash to show his influence in the midterm elections next year and beyond.
Many of Trump’s recent funding emails and direct contributors, who are donations buttons on his official website, work in Ohio for a total of 5% to Vice President JD Vance’s PAC.
According to campaign finance disclosures, the setup won $245,000 in May and June alone on the former Ohio Senators Committee alone.
This is a beneficial haul for the Vice President, who spends much of his political time funding for the Republican National Committee, the finance committee chair or other Trump affiliated organization. Importantly, the setup also provides Vance’s political committee with valuable data on active Trump donors. This could be useful in future White House campaigns, and it began to appear as Vance’s PAC sits on the backburner.
The arrangements quietly gathered in the spring after Trump set up Vance in his RNC finance role, two detailed savvy people told NBC News. The idea behind it was to ensure that Vance’s committee had enough cash to pay staff and other overhead costs, but his fundraising efforts focused primarily on the Nationalist Party.
First aligned to the presidency at just 41 years old, Vance is widely seen as a front runner that could become a widespread fight for the 2028 Republican nomination. Those familiar with fundraising splits said Trump’s approval should not be seen as a support or blessing for Vance’s bid, but should be more explained as a way to prevent Vance’s political ops from flapping while his priorities are elsewhere.
In response to a reporter’s question at the White House last month, Trump admitted that he views Vance as the “most likely” heir, but he has been careful not to praise the vice president. Trump also suggested that Secretary of State Marco Rubio is “someone who might somehow end up with JD.”
“It’s obviously too early to talk about it, but certainly he’s doing a great job and he’s probably going to like it at this point,” Trump added.
Without full support, Trump placed Vance well. In addition to his first vice president to serve as the RNC’s finance committee chair, Trump represented Vance as a key spokesman for the administration’s priorities.
The funding agreement is not explicit around 2028, but Vance has several advantages. Vance’s team can use the funds to pay for stage events that promote him with the advisor, and this arrangement will give Vance’s political trajectory more insight into Trump’s current small fight donor world.
Meanwhile, working in Ohio is not expected to get a tab for a trip to the rally for Vance’s mid-term candidate in 2026, said those familiar with the arrangement. These costs are covered by any of the entities responsible for events, a standard practice in political travel.
According to a report by the Federal Election Commission, Trump had no donation-sharing arrangements during his first term with his first vice president, Mike Pence. Pence was the first vice president to form another political division, but paid for his personal political trip from his leadership PAC. However, unlike Vance, who has to receive fundraising from the RNC, Pence was able to actively raise cash for his committee.
A prolific fundraiser, Trump raises funds for a variety of different “co-finance committees,” the federal government’s campaign finance vehicle, acts as a central hub, accepts donations, then spends money on various small committees. Trump’s Joint Financing Committee allocates dollars across different groups in accordance with Trump Track Hopes and Campaign Finance restrictions.
One of these joint fundraising committees is Trump National Committee JFC Inc., which currently divides donations while Trump’s own Leadership PAC, Never Surrender, RNC and Vance work in Ohio. Currently, 77.5% of all funds raised by the Joint Funding Committee are sent to Trump’s group, 17.5% to the RNC and 5% to the Vance group. Trump’s political teams can change their allocation formula at any time.
Money from Trump’s group helped to replenish working for Ohio’s financial resources. Ohio’s financial resources were reduced by about $16,000 in cash, and at the end of 2024 its debt was listed over $100,000. (The latest public report covers activities up to June only.)
Vance’s committee spent about $16,000 by the first half of 2025 and FEC Records is directed at complying and funding consulting and repealing some of its debt. The committee still lists $96,000 in debt related to strategic consulting.
The political team that helped Vance win the 2022 Senate campaign in Ohio remained close to him after Trump chose him as a running companion last year, but remains. And some of Vance’s advisors are already engaged in important mid-races. For example, his chief strategist Andys Lavian is working on Lt. Col. Pamela Evett’s bid for the governor of South Carolina.
People close to Vance, and Vance himself, emphasize that his focus is in the White House agenda and mid-2026, and that his own political future depends on how successful Trump and Republicans in the interim are.
“My attitude is,” Vance said in a May interview with NBC News, “If it runs in 2028, I have no right to receive it.”
