Skip to content
ProPublica Donate
ProPublica Donate

Cherokee County Republican Party

Organization Details
Purpose
We will build as many bridges as possible with people who are willing to work to make Cherokee County better. People who maintain that attitude as driving motivation for action are very easy to spot. Third, as elections occur, we will look to cultivate candidates and leaders who are fiscally conservative and, most importantly, responsive and accountable to constituents. In a phrase, our goal is to involve ourselves positively in as many aspects of Cherokee County life as possible.
Email
-
Leadership

Last updated 2020

Donna Kosicki
First Vice Chair
George Iacovacci
Vice Chair of Communications
Harry Abrams
Vice Chair of Candidates and Elected Officials
John Wallace
Vice- Treasurer
Kerry Luedke
Chairwoman
Linda Parker
Secretary
Marvin Lefebvre
Vice Chair of Membership
Pat Wallace
Vice Chair of Fundraising
Sharlet Keilman
Treasurer
Show more

Contributions & Expenditures

This organization has filed with the IRS for tax-exempt status but has never electronically reported individual contributions or expenditures.

This organization reports that it is a state or local political organization that files in Georgia. A qualified state or local political organization is one whose political activities relate solely to state or local public office and that routinely files publicly available reports with one or more states. For state-by-state information on tax-exempt political organizations and their filings, see the IRS’ listings.

About This Data


What is a 527?

A 527 is a nonprofit formed under Section 527 of the Internal Revenue Code, which grants tax-exempt status to organizations whose primary purpose is attempting to influence the election of one or more people to public office at the national, state or local level. But contributions to these organizations are not considered tax-deductible, unlike gifts to charities.

What organizations are in the 527 Explorer?

This database covers tax-exempt political organizations organized under Section 527, excluding organizations that are regulated by the Federal Election Commission (like federal PACs are); that expect to receive less than $25,000 in annual contributions; that are nonpolitical nonprofits, like charities; or that are political committees for a state or local candidate or a political party. An organization’s state is taken from the address reported on its most recent form 8871.

What organizations report itemized contributions and expenditures?

Tax-exempt political organizations, other than qualified state or local political organizations, that have filed for tax-exempt status with the IRS under Section 527 must file Form 8872 to disclose any expenditures made or contributions received. A qualified state or local political organization is one whose political activities relate solely to state or local public office and that routinely files publicly available reports with one or more states. For state-by-state information on tax-exempt political organizations and their filings, see the IRS’ listings.

Note: Only electronic filings are included in this data. While many organizations filed electronically before 2020, electronic filing for all organizations was only required beginning in January 2020. Therefore, some contributions and expenditures made prior to 2020 may not be reflected in this data.

Note: We make a best-effort attempt to not display street-level addresses for payments labeled as "salary."

How are the totals calculated?

An organization’s total contributions and expenditures are calculated by summing up the most recent report filed for each reporting period. However, organizations sometimes file reports for overlapping dates or reports that duplicate data. For any date range, the most recently filed report is marked. Duplicate contributions or expenditures (ones that have the exact same name, amount and date but show up in multiple reports) have been removed from the calculated totals.

Current site Current page