The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee ended April with $32.9 million in cash despite $4 million in debt; the National Republican Congressional Committee ended with $20.3 million and no debt 1. The DCCC raised $8.1 million in April and spent $9 million. The NRCC raised $7 million and spent $10.5 million. The net effect is a $21 million relative swing in a single month: from NRCC plus $8.3 million at the end of Q1 to DCCC plus $12.6 million after April. That is the second consecutive month of Democratic committee parity-or-better since the February reading .
Federal law bars super PACs from coordinating with campaigns on the ground game, which means committees buy field offices, registration drives, paid canvassers and voter-data infrastructure that super PACs cannot replicate. The April flip translates to more Democratic ground staff in the roughly 30 competitive House districts before Labour Day. The NRCC's burn pattern, spending $10.5 million against $7 million raised, indicates defensive advertising reservation rather than infrastructure build.
The super PAC layer runs in the opposite direction. The Senate Leadership Fund unveiled a $342 million deployment plan in early April targeting eight Senate races, its largest ever. SLF plus the Congressional Leadership Fund hold $257 million combined. House Majority PAC plus Senate Majority PAC hold $139 million. That is a $118 million Republican advantage at the outside-spending layer, against the $12.6 million Democratic advantage at the committee layer.
Wesleyan Media Project director Erika Franklin Fowler called the divergence the cycle's defining structural feature: Republicans hold the air war, Democrats hold the ground. Senate Majority PAC president J.B. Poersch's counter-view, in a Punchbowl interview, is that the SLF plan was sized before Cook's post-Callais rating moves and overcommits relative to the current environment. The two layers scale through May in parallel, not in substitution; one buys television advertising, the other buys the canvassers who knock on doors.
