The raw emotion and bipartisan outrage sparked by the confirmation process for Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh has spilled over into dueling online fundraising efforts.

GoFundMe pages raising money for Dr. Christine Blasey Ford — the woman who testified that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her at a high school party in 1982 — were flooded with donations after Blasey Ford mentioned the crowdfunding sites during the nationally televised Senate Judiciary Committee hearing Sept. 27.

Also see: Kavanaugh’s nomination advances to final vote

By the next day, one GoFundMe campaign for Blasey Ford had raised nearly $542,000 and had stopped accepting donations. Donations to one page supporting her jumped from $179,000 to $305,000 in the space of 30 minutes during her Sept. 27 testimony. A separate fund to raise funds to endow an academic chair and/or scholarships in Blasey Ford’s name has raised $29,536.

All told, GoFundMe pages created to support Blasey Ford had raised more than $827,000 and counting by Oct. 8.

“We are working directly with all campaign organizers and guarantee the funds raised will be transferred directly to the Ford family,” GoFundMe spokeswoman Catherine Cichy told MarketWatch after the Senate hearing.

Meanwhile supporters of Kavanaugh, who angrily maintained his innocence at the judiciary committee hearing, had poured nearly $607,000 into a GoFundMe campaign to raise money “for Brett Kavanaugh’s family to use for security or however they see fit,” the organizer wrote. (Both Blasey Ford and Kavanaugh have said they’ve received death threats.) At least two other GoFundMe pages said they were working to raise money to support Kavanaugh and his family, bringing the total amount raised for him to $623,000 and counting on Oct. 8.

Also see: Penalized for expressing emotion, women contrast Christine Blasey Ford’s ‘poise’ with Brett Kavanaugh’s ‘anger’

GoFundMe is also working with the creators of pages supporting Kavanaugh to ensure the money goes to its intended recipients, Cichy said.

More than 42 GoFundMe pages that mentioned either Kavanaugh or Blasey Ford sprang up in the lead-up and aftermath of Blasey Ford’s testimony. Many had zero donations or appeared to be satirical. One claimed to be raising money to buy Kavanaugh “beers for life,” apparently inspired by Kavanaugh’s repeated references to his love of beer during the Senate judiciary committee hearing.

The rapid-fire fundraising was just one expression of the tension over Kavanaugh’s nomination, which has added fuel to the already explosive national discussion over sexual misconduct that started nearly a year ago with the revelations about movie producer Harvey Weinstein.

The judiciary committee hearing, during which a visibly shaken Blasey Ford described her alleged assault in detail, was an emotional experience for many who watched. The country’s largest anti-sexual violence nonprofit, RAINN, said there was a 201% increase in calls to its national sexual assault hot line in the hours afterward. The group also received donations from more than 1,700 people, according to a tweet.