Welcome
This is the refeshed dashboard home page.
Start by choosing an election to browse:
This is the refeshed dashboard home page.
Start by choosing an election to browse:
Use the list below to navigate between all candidate contests in the election.
Use the list below to navigate between all ballot measure contests in the election.
A candidate controlled committee is a campaign committee established, financed, or controlled by a candidate for local office.
Once a committee raises or spends $2,000 or more, it must file regular campaign finance statements (Form 460) with the Ethics Commission, including semiannual reports at the end of January and July, and three pre-election statements in the weeks before an election. They are prohibited from coordinating their spending decisions with third-party committees. Under San Francisco law, no person other than the candidate may contribute more than $500 to a candidate's committee for a single election.
The totals shown represent the combined funds raised and spent by all candidate controlled committees for each office in the current election. Funds are aggregated by summing the itemized and unitemized contributions on schedules A and C from Form 460 and contributions received on Form 497 and Form 496P3. Funds also includes Loans from Form 460 Schedule B1, and Public Funds approved by the Ethics Commission as part of the San Francisco Public Financing Program. Expenses are aggregated by summing the itemized and unitemized expenditures on schedules E and F. Figures are rounded to the nearest thousand. Data is updated nightly, reflecting the filings made the previous day.
Contributors are individuals who have made contributions to the candidate's campaign. The table lists contributors by their first and last names, along with the total amount they have contributed.
Note: The data in this table is based on the most recent filings and are updated nightly.
Expenditures are the amounts spent by the candidate's campaign. The table lists expenditures by their type and amount.
Note: The data in this table is based on the most recent filings and are updated nightly.
Candidate Controlled Committees are a candidate's primary fundraising and expense-making entity.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Donec at dolor a nisi accumsan egestas. Suspendisse facilisis risus a felis tincidunt, sit amet sollicitudin lectus porta. Integer porta faucibus est et gravida.
Praesent efficitur rutrum urna, ut viverra purus imperdiet at. Sed elit eros, ultricies ac consequat ac, feugiat et ante. Ut et lectus et libero ullamcorper suscipit tempor a lectus. Nulla risus ligula, pharetra quis pretium at, convallis eget nunc. Donec at metus urna. Sed sollicitudin tortor massa.
Sed augue tortor, facilisis nec elit sit amet, ultrices eleifend purus. Nullam eu odio facilisis, aliquet lorem sed, pulvinar eros. Donec in sollicitudin leo. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas.
A third-party committee is a political committee that raises and spends money to support or oppose candidates for local office but operates independently of those candidates and their campaigns. These committees are often called independent expenditure committees or primarily formed committees. They are prohibited from coordinating their spending decisions with any candidate or candidate controlled committee. Third-party committees are not subject to contribution limits.
Once a committee raises or spends $2,000 or more, it must file regular campaign finance statements (Form 460) with the Ethics Commission, including semiannual reports at the end of January and July, and three pre-election statements in the weeks before an election. In addition, third-party committees must disclose independent expenditures (Form 496) and contributions made or received (Form 497) within 24 hours during the 90-days before the election.
The totals shown represent the combined funds raised and spent by all third-party committees for each office in the current election. Data is aggregated by summing the itemized and unitemized contributions on schedules A and C and loans from schedule B1 from Form 460 and contributions received on Form 497 and Form 496P3 filed electronically with the San Francisco Ethics Commission, which are made public through the Commission's disclosure system. Figures are rounded to the nearest thousand. Data is updated nightly, reflecting the filings made the previous day.
Ballot Measure Committees are primarily formed to support or oppose a specific ballot measure.
Once a committee raises or spends $2,000 or more, it must file regular campaign finance statements (Form 460) with the Ethics Commission, including semiannual reports at the end of January and July, and three pre-election statements in the weeks before an election. In addition, third-party committees must disclose independent expenditures (Form 496) and contributions made or received (Form 497) within 24 hours during the 90-days before the election.
The totals shown represent the combined funds raised and spent by all ballot measure committees for each office in the current election. Data is aggregated by summing the itemized and unitemized contributions on schedules A and C and loans from schedule B1 from Form 460 and contributions received on Form 497 and Form 496P3 filed electronically with the San Francisco Ethics Commission, which are made public through the Commission's disclosure system. Figures are rounded to the nearest thousand. Data is updated nightly, reflecting the filings made the previous day.
"Multi-Ballot Measure" Committees are primarily formed to support or oppose more than one ballot measure.
Once a committee raises or spends $2,000 or more, it must file regular campaign finance statements (Form 460) with the Ethics Commission, including semiannual reports at the end of January and July, and three pre-election statements in the weeks before an election. In addition, third-party committees must disclose independent expenditures (Form 496) and contributions made or received (Form 497) within 24 hours during the 90-days before the election.
The totals shown represent the combined funds raised and spent by all multi-ballot measure committees in the current election. Data is aggregated by summing the itemized and unitemized contributions on schedules A and C and loans from schedule B1 from Form 460 and contributions received on Form 497 and Form 496P3 filed electronically with the San Francisco Ethics Commission, which are made public through the Commission's disclosure system. Figures are rounded to the nearest thousand. Data is updated nightly, reflecting the filings made the previous day.
The individuals or entities who have given the largest total monetary support to a committee.
Top Contributors are scoped within the page. For an election, the top contributors include all contributors to primarily formed committees within the election.
Visit the Contributors page for an election to search contributors across committees and see all committees within an election that a contributor has given to.
Contributions or expenditures made by a committee or individual in support of a candidate or measure, independent of the candidate's own campaign.
Contributions or expenditures made by a committee or individual in opposition to a candidate or measure, independent of the candidate's own campaign.
Committees that spend money to advocate for or against candidates or ballot measures but do so independently of any candidate's campaign.
A roll-up view of a committee's overall financial activity, including contributions received and expenditures made.
Spending made independently of any campaign to support or oppose a ballot measure.
Data comes from FPPC496 and 460 schedule D
Spending made independently of any campaign to support or oppose a candidate for office.
Data comes from FPPC496 and 460 schedule D
Contributions of $100 or more made during the late reporting period (within 90 days before an election) that must be disclosed promptly.
Data comes from FPPC497 P2.
Payments made by a committee to support or oppose candidates, ballot measures, or other committees, beyond its primary focus.
Data comes from FPPC460 Schedule D.