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Ahead of Tuesday primary, Trump target Massie says billionaires are trying to 'buy' his seat

4:10
Massie on Cassidy loss, overcoming Trump: ‘My situation is a little bit different’
Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP
ByQuinn Scanlan
May 18, 2026, 8:38 PM

Days before his highly anticipated primary, Republican Rep. Thomas Massie struck a defiant tone, asserting on Sunday that out-of-state billionaires "have funneled millions of dollars in here" in an effort to "buy a seat" in Congress.

"How did this race become the most expensive race in the history of Congress for a primary? It's because three billionaires from outside of Kentucky have funneled millions of dollars in here. They're trying to buy a seat," Massie said in an interview on ABC News' "This Week."

On Friday, Massie told a reporter that his has "turned into a referendum on whether Israel gets to buy seats in Congress."

Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., appears on ABC News' "This Week" on May 17, 2026.
ABC News

"This Week" anchor George Stephanopoulos pressed Massie on the comment, asking him, "What did you mean by that?"

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Massie said that two of the individuals he named -- major GOP donors Miriam Adelson and Paul Singer, along with the Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC) and American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), are "all part of the Israeli lobby."

Adelson and Singer are both major AIPAC contributors.

"That's where all the money comes from, and it will be a referendum on foreign policy, whether Israel gets to dictate that by, you know, bullying members of Congress, and I'm the one they haven't been able to bully, so they're putting all the brunt, the force on me," Massie said.

Massie said his opponents are "desperate" because he says he's ahead in the polls.

"That's why the president is losing sleep and tweeting about this," the Kentucky congressman said.

President Donald Trump listens as congressional candidate Ed Gallrein speaks at Verst Logistics on Wednesday, March 11, 2026, in Hebron, Kentucky.
Julia Demaree Nikhinson/AP

In a statement to ABC News, RJC CEO Matt Brooks accused Massie of "antisemitism and bottom-of-the-barrel nativism at a time when Jew hatred is on rise."

"The RJC stands with those who will combat antisemitism like Captain Ed Gallrein, and against those who foment it," Brooks said, referring to Massie's Republican opponent. "Massie's record is indefensible, and the Republican primary voters of Kentucky will hold him accountable." 

ABC News also reached out to AIPAC, Adelson's foundation, Singer's foundation and Singer's investment management fund to request comment in response to Massie's statements, but has not received a response.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly attacked Massie, including on Sunday morning, after another Republican who Trump wanted to oust from Congress -- Louisiana's Sen. Bill Cassidy -- lost his primary on Saturday.

"Bad Congressman Tom Massie voted against Tax Cuts, the Border Wall, our Military and Law Enforcement. Actually, he voted against almost everything that is good. The Worst Republican Congressman in History. Kentucky, vote the bum out on Tuesday. We can’t live with this troublemaker for another two years. He is a true negative force!!!" Trump posted on his social media platform.

Massie is facing a primary challenge from former Navy SEAL Ed Gallrein, who was endorsed by Trump before he even entered the race. In an Oct. 17 Truth Social post, Trump said he hoped Gallrein "gets into the Race against Massie"; four days later, Gallrein did just that.

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In Massie's Kentucky district, Trump attacks GOP congressman as 'disloyal to America'

The seven-term congressman has clashed with Trump throughout his second stint in the White House. But Massie argued he can overcome Trump's opposition to win this primary.

"I have the endorsement of the right to life organizations, the gun organizations. I had four members of Congress come here yesterday and campaign with me. So, my situation is a little bit different [than Sen. Cassidy's]," Massie said. "Plus, I’ve had millions of dollars come in from the grassroots, tens of thousands of donors, to my website, thomasmassie.com. And it’s still coming in. And that’s how we’re going to beat them."

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