Wall Street is putting money into the most expensive House election ever

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Steve Marcus/Reuters

Paul Singer, the billionaire founder of hedge fund firm Elliott Management. A spokesperson declined to say whether Singer had donated to the Georgia election, but data show that affiliates of the firm did.

Wall Street is putting its money into the US' most expensive ever House race, with most of the money going to the Republican candidate.

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The election, on Tuesday, June 20, in Georgia's 6th District, an Atlanta suburb, is set to replace the House seat of Tom Price, who recently left to become the new health and human services secretary.

The race, between Democrat Jon Ossoff and Republican Karen Handel, has raised at least $56.7 million, according to the Center For Responsive Politics, which tracks money in politics. That staggering figure is nearly double the second-most expensive House election in Florida in 2012, the group says.

The Georgia election is considered a referendum on Donald Trump's win in November last year.

There are a number of donors affiliated with Wall Street names, including individuals affiliated with hedge fund firm Elliott Management, Wells Fargo and KPMG, who all donated to the Republican candidate.

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Here's a more detailed list, per the Center for Responsive Politics. CRP notes that "the organizations themselves did not donate, rather the money came from the organizations' PACs, their individual members or employees or owners, and those individuals' immediate families."

These numbers may increase as CRP processes more data from donor filings in the coming week, the group told Business Insider.

To Karen Handel (R)

  • New York hedge fund firm Elliott Management - $2,700
  • PricewaterhouseCoopers - $5,000
  • KPMG - $5,000
  • Wells Fargo - $2,950
  • Charles Schwab Group - $2,700
  • Arcus Capital Partners - $5,400

Jonathan Ossoff (D)

  • Sol Goldman Investments - $5,400
  • New World Capital - $5,400

Ossoff's biggest donation - a tally of about $32,000 so far - came from people related to Emory University. Handel's biggest donors came from people affiliated with Cooper Firm, Hennessy Automotive, Northwest Excavating and Rollins Inc. They all tied with donations of $10,800 each.

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