The Bulwark flagged a stunning revelation shared by popular political influencer Maria Comstock, one that laid bare the vast disparity in scale between conservative and liberal political influence campaigns.
Comstock, who’s amassed millions of followers across several social media platforms, revealed in a social media post recently that, in the lead-up to the 2024 election, she was approached by both conservative and liberal groups with offers to produce paid political content. The difference in rates offered by the two groups, she wrote, left her “floored.”
“Left: $2,000 for one video. Right: $36,000 for one video,” Comstock wrote. “Same format. Same audience size. Same production lift. A 1,700% difference.”
Comstock said that because of her personal “values,” she declined the offers from conservative-leaning groups and accepted offers from the liberal-leaning ones. However, she noted that for many influencers, forgoing larger payouts to instead produce content more aligned with their own personal political leanings was a luxury many couldn’t afford.
“Let’s be honest: for many creators, that delta makes the decision for you. For influencers, brand deals aren’t ‘extra.’ They’re rent. They’re healthcare. They’re payroll for editors,” Comstock wrote.
“When someone offers you the equivalent of several months’ income for one deliverable, it’s not an abstract ethical debate; it’s survival math. And if you’re a lifestyle, sports, or comedy creator who doesn’t deeply care about politics? The incentive structure nudges you in one direction.”
Comstock argued that without a major course correction, the vast difference in funding between conservative and liberal political influence campaigns could dramatically shape political discourse in years to come.
“Creators are rational actors responding to incentives. If one side offers 18x the rate for the same work, it will shape the ideological makeup of the influencer economy over time, not necessarily because creators are ideologues, but because they are business owners,” she wrote.
“The political influencer ecosystem isn’t *just* about ideas. It’s about capital allocation. And right now, capital is not evenly distributed.”
The post ‘Floored me’: Influencer exposes staggering money gap fueling right-wing propaganda appeared first on Raw Story.




