PublicReceiptBeta
Electoral receipt · State Assembly

SHANNON KESSLER

State Assembly · ASM-30 · 2026 cycle

Funding Receipt
SHANNON KESSLER · 2026 cycle
★ · campaign finance, itemized · ★
Raised for this race $51,002
Funding mix · 83 unique donors · primary committee
S Small donors (Under $500) $12,441 · 24%
M Medium donors ($500–$999) $4,072 · 8%
L Large donors ($1,000+) $34,490 · 68%
Top donors to primary committee (25 shown)
01 Kessler, Shannon · Shannon Kessler Real Estate $30,813
02 McKannay, Dixie · Retired $1,295
03 Cole, Darsie · Self Employed, No Separate Business Name $1,257
04 Hawks, Jennifer · Retired $1,047
05 Adams, Gary L. · Retired $1,000
06 Duyst, Amy · None $692
07 Dorfman, Nicole · Dorfman Kinesiology $678
08 Crist, Greg · Retired $600
09 Wade, Kelly · Santa Barbara County Fire Department $524
10 Gaspar, Anthony · Connect Home Loans Connect Builders $524
11 Weber, Jennifer · Retired $500
12 Poorman, Randy · Self-employed, no separate business name $500
13 Burbach, Cheryl · Retired $500
14 Workman, Christine · Retired $500
15 Grant, Byron · C-21 Masters $499
16 South County Chamber of Commerce $364
17 Johnson, Elizabeth · Retired $350
18 Merritte, Jennifer · Allan Hancock College $300
19 Nolan, Beth · Western Trans Logistics $289
20 Eckert, Jeanette · Avila Bay Athletic Club $273
21 Lacey, Cara · PG&E $268
22 Cox, Levi · Retired $265
23 Jordan, Randall · Palomar homes $262
24 Ardys Pilates Studio $250
25 Bell Jr., Charles H. · Retired $250
Primary committee total $51,002
Source: California Secretary of State Cal-Access bulk export
Pipeline: scripts/pull_calaccess_filings.py · Dedup: latest AMEND_ID
/methodology

What you're seeing. The Raised for this race total counts only money that flowed into committees clearly named for State Assembly in this cycle (e.g. "SHANNON KESSLER for Assembly 2026"). The wider footprint shows every committee SHANNON KESSLER controls during the same window — ballot-measure leadership PACs, future-office exploratory committees, officeholder accounts. A candidate raising large sums into non-electoral vehicles still shows where the institutional attention is. Both surfaces are honest; they answer different questions.