Paxton Sues ActBlue, $16B Platform, Donation Fraud
Summary
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against ActBlue, a political fundraising platform that has processed over $16 billion since 2004, alleging the platform deceived consumers about its donor vetting safeguards and allowed fraudulent and potentially foreign donations. Investigators from the Office of the Attorney General found that ActBlue continues to accept gift card and prepaid debit card donations despite public representations that it had ceased the practice, creating a substantial risk of impermissible contributions.
“ActBlue's acceptance of gift cards and prepaid debit cards allows for fraudulent donations due to the lack of identification required.”
Political fundraising platforms that accept gift cards, prepaid debit cards, or other low-identification payment methods should review whether their public-facing statements about donor vetting are accurate and consistently applied. ActBlue's own outside counsel reportedly acknowledged that the organization's representations about donation safeguards were not true — a factual concession that is likely to feature prominently in the litigation and could be relevant to any similarly-positioned platform that has made comparable public representations to regulators or Congress.
What changed
The Texas Attorney General filed a lawsuit against ActBlue alleging deceptive consumer practices related to the platform's political donation processing. The OAG investigation, initiated in 2023, found that ActBlue misrepresented its donor vetting policies to Congress and the public, and that certain safeguards are not consistently implemented. Investigators demonstrated that ActBlue continues to process gift card and prepaid debit card donations despite representations to the contrary, a practice that enables fraudulent donations due to minimal identification requirements. The lawsuit seeks to hold ActBlue accountable for its misrepresentations under state deceptive practices law.
Political fundraising platforms and organizations that use third-party processing services should review their donor vetting procedures and ensure representations made to regulators and the public accurately reflect actual practices. Platforms accepting non-traditional payment methods for political donations face heightened scrutiny under state deceptive trade practices laws.
Archived snapshot
Apr 21, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Attorney General Ken Paxton sued ActBlue, a major political fundraising platform, for misleading consumers about its unlawful donation processes that allow fraudulent and foreign donations to undermine the integrity of our nation’s elections.
“The radical left has relied on ActBlue as a way to funnel foreign donations and dark money into their political campaigns to subvert our laws and compromise the integrity of our elections,” said Attorney General Paxton. “ActBlue lied to Congress and to the American people, and I will ensure justice is served. It has blatantly ignored state law that prohibits deceptive practices, and it must pay for its illegal conduct. Fair elections are the foundation of our democracy, and I will work to ensure no illegal campaign donation flies under the radar.”
ActBlue funds primarily left-wing campaigns at all levels of government and has processed more than $16 billion since its founding in 2004. In 2023, Attorney General Paxton opened an investigation into whether ActBlue was enabling donor fraud in violation of Texas law. Then, in 2024, Attorney General Paxton sent a Petition for Rulemaking to the FEC detailing how suspicious actors had appeared to be continuing to use ActBlue’s political fundraising platform to make a large number of straw political donations. Amidst the OAG’s investigation and a Congressional investigation, ActBlue claimed it stopped its illegal operations.
Now, recent reporting and internal OAG investigations have shown that ActBlue lied about its donor vetting policies and its operations. As the New York Times recently reported, ActBlue’s own outside counsel acknowledged that the organization’s representations about its donation safeguards were not true. Further, the Office of the Attorney General has determined that certain safeguards are not consistently implemented, creating a substantial risk that impermissible foreign contributions may have been processed. For example, investigators from the Office of the Attorney General were able to prove that ActBlue continues to process gift card donations, despite the company’s representations that the opposite is true. ActBlue’s acceptance of gift cards and prepaid debit cards allows for fraudulent donations due to the lack of identification required. ActBlue’s misrepresentations could lead to entities utilizing its services to violate state and federal election laws.
To read the lawsuit, click here.
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