❓WHAT HAPPENED: ActBlue is under investigation for potentially misleading Congress about its vetting of foreign donations.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: ActBlue executives, Covington & Burling law firm, Regina Wallace-Jones, and congressional Republicans.
📍WHEN & WHERE: Investigations began in early 2025, with events unfolding through 2026.
💬KEY QUOTE: There was “a substantial risk that some of the funds received were impermissible contributions from foreign nationals,” noted Covington & Burling.
🎯IMPACT: The investigations and internal turmoil could destabilize Democratic fundraising efforts ahead of the midterm elections.
ActBlue, the leading Democrat fundraising platform, is now under heavy scrutiny from the Department of Justice (DOJ) and Republican lawmakers in Congress. The pressure follows a warning from its own law firm that CEO Regina Wallace-Jones may have misled Congress about how thoroughly the organization screened foreign donations.
In a 2023 letter sent to Republican investigators, Wallace-Jones stated that ActBlue operated a “multilayered” screening process designed to block foreign contributions. However, the law firm Covington & Burling, working for ActBlue, later determined that these procedures were not consistently applied. Internal memos from the lawyers noted that, for instance, donors who paid via third-party apps like Apple Pay, PayPal, and Venmo were not asked to provide their passport information, despite Wallace-Jones assuring Congress they were.
Covington & Burling warned that there was “a substantial risk that some of the funds received were impermissible contributions from foreign nationals,” and that ActBlue’s claims to Congress could trigger a criminal investigation if federal prosecutors concluded that the platform had hidden information about its actual efforts to stop foreign donations. The disclosures have already triggered multiple high-level resignations at the organization.
ActBlue has pushed back against its former legal advisers at Covington, claiming the firm failed to properly review the 2023 letter before it went to Congress. The platform has since ended its relationship with the law firm, claiming it has introduced new safeguards to block foreign donations.
The combination of federal and congressional investigations, plus internal turmoil, is raising serious concerns about ActBlue’s ability to support Democrat fundraising efforts ahead of the upcoming midterm elections. Since its founding, the organization has processed nearly $19 billion in donations and now faces mounting pressure to resolve the legal and compliance issues.
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