释义 |
PACPAC /ˌpiː eɪ ˈsiː, pæk/ noun [countable] American English  - A Senate candidate can accept up to $ 10, 000 from a single PAC during a six-year election cycle.
- Indeed, none of the small-business groups comes close to perennial PAC powerhouses such as the National Association of Realtors.
- The PAC said that de Klerk had not conceded enough to persuade the movement to bring its exiled cadres home.
- The Frenzel and Laxolt bill proposed to reduce the power of PACs by increasing the role of political parties.
- The McHugh and Conable bill left PAC and candidate spending untouched.
- The specific proposals of the PAC were set out in paragraph 8.10 to 8.16.
- Under federal law, most PACs may give a candidate as much as $ 5, 000 an election.
NOUN► money· Thomas Bliley, R-Va., has received the most tobacco PAC money in the past decade, $ 123, 976. the abbreviation of political action committee |