Andrew Harnik/Getty Karoline Leavitt's 2022 congressional campaign is in debt to over 100 creditors Karoline for Congress accepted more than $300,000 in illegal campaign contributions in 2022, and in the most recent reporting period, she failed to pay any of it back In 2025, she repaid five donors total — two of whom were her parents Karoline Leavitt's 2022 congressional campaign is in debt more than $300,000, with money owed to over 100 creditors. According to adisclosurefiled with the Federal Election Commission on July 6, the current White House press secretary's 2022 congressional campaign, Karoline for Congress, failed to repay any of its $326,370.50 debt. Leavitt's campaign reported zero cash on hand at the end of the reporting period, which wrapped at the end of June. PerOpen Secrets, Leavitt's campaign debt stems from illegal donations and contributions, in that they exceeded federal limits on monetary gifts to political campaigns, from individuals, political figures and political committees. As illegal contributions, the funds should have been returned — but the outlet reported that she and her campaign already spent the money. Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post via Getty Notable contributors include former New Hampshire Gov. Craig Benson and former New Hampshire Senate Majority Leader Robert Clegg Jr. — who died in 2023 — as well as Leavitt's parents, thoughNOTUS reportedin April that the White House press secretary repaid them $2,900 each. Significant donations include $46,747 from consultant Axiom Strategies, $41,000 from polling firm Remington Research Group and $12,815 from fundraising firm Fundraising, Inc. This year, Leavitt's campaign has only refunded five donors including her parents, per the disclosure and NOTUS. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty In November 2022, political action committee End Citizens United filed an FEC complaint against Karoline for Congress, accusing the campaign of violating campaign finance law. However, Open Secrets noted that the FEC has yet to issue a ruling on the case, and without the minimum number of commissioners (and who can only be nominated by the president), it cannot do so at this time. It's possible for the Department of Justice to insert itself into the case for it to proceed, yet as Attorney General Pam Bondi and Leavitt are both senior members of the Trump administration, it's unlikely the case would proceed that way. Read the original article onPeople