Radical congresswoman Ilhan Omar is on track to pay her new husband's company nearly double the half million dollars she funneled his way last year, new figures obtained by DailyMail.com show.

In the first three months of this year Omar paid more than $290,000 to the E Street Group, a fundraising and consulting group run by Tim Mynett, who she married last month.

If she continues at this rate it will mean the company would get a whopping $1.16 million from Omar's campaign in 2020. It received a total of $523,000 for the whole of last year.

'Omar's campaign chest is looking more and more like a dowry,' Peter Flaherty, the head of a group which has filed a complaint with the FEC over Omar's spending, told DailyMail.com.

Radical congresswoman Ilhan Omar is on track to pay her new husband's company nearly double the half million dollars she funneled his way last year, new figures obtained by DailyMail.com show

THIS YEAR: In the first three months of this year Omar paid more than $290,000 to the E Street Group, a fundraising and consulting group run by Tim Mynett, who she married last month. If she continues at this rate it will mean the company would get a whopping $1.16 million from Omar's campaign in 2020. Pictured: Some of the payments Omar made to Mynett's company this year

LAST YEAR: Ilhan's campaign paid Mynett's company a total $523,000 for the whole of last year.

'Most candidates for federal office keep a close eye on their vendors to make sure they aren't being overcharged, but with her being married to her chief fundraiser the incentive may be the other way round as the money spent is going directly to the family.

'Basically, her campaign finance disclosures read more like a wedding registry where friends can make gifts to the happy couple,' added Flaherty, chairman of the conservative National Legal and Policy Center.

The raw figures, released late Wednesday by the Federal Election Commission, show that Omar's campaign committee, Ilhan For Congress, paid E Street a total of $291,059.91 between January 1 and March 31.

That includes regular monthly payments of $67,000, broken down as $50,000 for 'digital advertising,' $12,000 for 'fundraising consulting' and $5,000 for 'digital consulting.'

She had been paying the lower two figures through much of her time in Congress, but only started paying the $50,000 figure on a monthly basis in December, soon after both she and Mynett got divorced.

The other $102,000 is for expenses for items such as travel, postage and campaign merchandise.

Omar's spokesman did not answer specific questions that DailyMail.com put to him regarding the figures, instead pointing to a series of tweets that Omar made last month about her marriage to Mynett and his work for her campaign.

Omar's spokesman did not answer specific questions that DailyMail.com put to him regarding the figures, instead pointing to a series of tweets that Omar made last month about her marriage to Mynett and his work for her campaign

'We consulted with a top FEC campaign attorney to ensure there were no possible legal issues with our relationship. We were told this is not uncommon and that no, there weren't,' she said in one Twitter message

'We consulted with a top FEC campaign attorney to ensure there were no possible legal issues with our relationship. We were told this is not uncommon and that no, there weren't,' she said in one Twitter message.

Omar, 37, a Democrat whose district is based in Minneapolis, tied the knot with Mynett on March 11 in Washington, DC, so the FEC figures include the first three weeks of their married life, during which she paid E Street more than $120,000.

On the day of the quickie ceremony in a Washington park she shelled out $498.80 for travel expenses and the $50,000 monthly payment fell due the following day. In subsequent days she forked over $5,000 for research services and $1,046.83 for travel expenses. The actual details of the expenditure were not released in the FEC disclosures.

Then on March 30, there were two separate payments totaling $63,834.18 for 'mail, advertising, production and postage.'

Omar, one-fourth of 'The Squad,' a group of female leftist freshman Democrats in Congress, has courted controversy since she became one of the first two Muslim women ever elected to Congress in the 2018 elections.

The Somali-born congresswoman has refused to address claims that she married her own brother — a British subject — to allow him to enter the United States to study and angered millions when she described 9/11 as 'some people doing something,' in a speech in California.

The figures released by the Federal Elections Commission show Omar has raised just under $3 million since the start of 2019, putting her in the top 1 percent of all candidates running for election in November.

Omar, 37, a Democrat whose district is based in Minneapolis, tied the knot with Mynett on March 11 in Washington, DC, so the FEC figures include the first three weeks of their married life, during which she paid E Street more than $120,000. On the day of the quickie ceremony in a Washington park she shelled out $498.80 for travel expenses and the $50,000 monthly payment fell due the following day

Her figure is dwarfed by the top fundraiser, Republican House whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana, who raised $13.8 million and by her own Squad colleague Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York with $5.4 million, but she still ranks 22nd of more than 2,700 announced House candidates, more than 1,000 of whom say they have raised nothing.

'It shows just how she has become a national figure,' said Flaherty. 'It is very impressive for a freshman congresswoman to raise that amount.

'But it raises the question: with all that money going to her husband's company, is it being used for other purposes?

'The ethical problem is that if a significant portion of her campaign funds are staying within the family it could become a way for special interests to buy influence with her.'

Flaherty said many other politicians have employed family members. 'But she is the first that I can think of to do it on this scale.'

Omar's series of tweets followed a Washington Post piece about her marriage and whether it raised ethical problems. She said E Street had worked for Keith Ellison, her predecessor in Congress, and Mynett's partner Will Hailer reached out to her after Ellison announced he was stepping down to run for Minnesota's Attorney General.

'My husband Tim was Keith's national fundraiser for a decade — raising millions of dollars across the country to support Keith — and is an expert in the business,' she said in one tweet.

'My relationship with Tim began long after this work started,' said another.

In a third, she wrote: 'We had roughly eight weeks to build a campaign and win a primary against more financially well-connected opponents. As a new candidate running in the Fifth (District), they were critical to getting a progressive like me with few resources elected.'

She insisted that she paid E Street 'fair market value' for its services, spending 'relatively little on fundraising compared to how much we raise, allowing us to invest more in organizing work to pass a bold progressive agenda.'

Another tweet read: 'As a family, we are committed to the practice of joy, compassion and love in our politics. And we are giving ourselves the permission to be happy and hope others will as well.'

Flaherty's group filed a complaint with the FEC last fall, asking it to investigate payments to Mynett's company. 'If Ilhan for Congress reimbursed Mynett's LLC for travel so that Rep. Omar would have the benefit of Mynett's romantic companionship, the expenditure must be considered personal in nature,' he wrote.

But because the FEC does not have enough members it hasn't been able to meet and consider the complaint. 'The FEC is in a state of paralysis,' said Flaherty.

'It looked like there might be confirmation of a Republican which would give it a quorum but the coronavirus derailed that.'

Omar represents one of the most Democratic districts in the country and would be almost guaranteed reelection. But first she has to beat off four Democratic challengers in a primary scheduled for August.

When she was first elected to the House in 2018, Omar she had just remarried Ahmed Hirsi, the father of her three children, but she soon started dating Mynett, who was already working for her.

As DailyMail.com exclusively reported, she was spotted holding hands with him over dinner at a California restaurant in March last year. Initially they both denied an affair.

She moved out of the family home in Minneapolis and into a penthouse apartment in the city's trendy Mill District.

Meanwhile, Mynett, 39, split with his wife Dr. Beth Jordan in April last year, when, according to Jordan's divorce filing, he 'made a shocking declaration of love' for the congresswoman.

Mynett and Jordan, who have a teenage son together, divorced in December.

Then in March Omar and Mynett married in Washington's John Marshall Park, right next to the H. Carl Moultrie courthouse where Mynett's divorce case was heard.

Mynett officiated at his own wedding, which is legal in DC in what is known as a 'self-uniting marriage.' Mynett converted to Islam shortly before the ceremony.