An election year filled with anti-K Street rhetoric hasn’t stopped candidates up and down the ballot from pressuring prominent Washington lobbyists to pony up record sums of political cash.

Lobbyists may well give more in 2016 than they did in previous cycles. The 2014 Supreme Court ruling in McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission did away with an aggregate limit on donations to candidates for federal office. And with control of the Senate in play, it’s increasingly difficult for lobbyists from both parties to resist fundraising pleas.

New arrangements such as joint fundraising committees have also driven up the requests for money. And registered Democratic lobbyists, who for two presidential cycles were blocked by President Barack Obama from donating to his campaigns, have now been liberated. They have made Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton the top recipient of K Street cash among White House hopefuls this election cycle. The Democratic National Committee is also once more welcoming lobbyist checks.

“I liked it better under Obama’s regulations,” joked Democratic lobbyist Tony Podesta of the Podesta Group. “I would’ve had $36,000 more money if Obama had run for a third term.”

Donald Trump, the Republican Party’s presumptive White House nominee, does not discourage lobbyist donations, but his unconventional candidacy has not drawn a big response from K Street, according to federal election data. The emergence of joint fundraising committees merging Trump’s effort with those of the Republican National Committee and state Republican parties has yet to foster more back-and-forth between the lobbyists and Team Trump.