Money | Democratic National Convention Biggest Convention Donors Usually Need Favors No limit to funds given to parties' gatherings By Nick McMaster Posted Aug 25, 2008 7:13 PM CDT Copied Michelle Obama, at the site of the Democratic National Convention in Denver, Monday morning, Aug. 25, 2008. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak) Major donors to the Democratic and GOP conventions this year either have business pending with politicians or have recently received a favorable ruling, the Los Angeles Times reports. From cable companies to a government union to an electric utility, millions of dollars have flowed into party coffers—but both sides deny any attempt to buy votes. Meanwhile convention committees and Barack Obama have called for finance reform, but both conventions are in mid-size cities with limited donor pools—and cost $60 million apiece. "We ended the role of federal officeholders seeking huge unlimited contributions for the federal electoral process," said one campaign finance advocate. "This is the only place left where it continues." Read These Next Online boo-bears go after the demo firm tearing White House apart. President Monroe's daughter wrote a desperate plea in 1839. Plane windshield partially shatters mid-flight. There's a suspect. 'Butt-breathing' could be the future for struggling patients. Report an error