General Election Fundraising: GOP More Competitive Than Expected, FEC Records Show

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First Posted: 05-23-08 11:52 AM   |   Updated: 05-31-08 05:12 AM

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Obama Cash

Barack Obama has been hailed this election season for, among other things, his impressive fundraising apparatus. But while the Democratic frontrunner's financial edge over Republican rival John McCain has become an assumption in most reporting, the cash advantage is not reflected in the recent FEC filing reports.

In reality, despite all the reports of an energized party, Democrats are behind Republicans this year in cash on hand, and they hold only a negligible lead in funds raised over the past month. And while Obama himself raised significantly more cash than John McCain, the difference is more than made up for by the fundraising of the Republican National Committee.

According to FEC reports from the month of April, Barack Obama raised $31 million and ended the month with $37 million cash on hand. By contrast, McCain ended April with $16 million raised and $22 million cash on hand.

However, the Republican National Committee holds ten-fold that of their Democratic counterpart, with $40.1 million in the bank and $15.7 million raised in the month of April; the DNC's numbers are $4.4 million and $4.7 million, respectively. The combined amounts put the Democratic fundraising for April above the Republicans by only $2 million, while Republicans have almost $22 million more in the bank.

This past April, McCain signed an agreement with the Republican National Committee that would allow him to raise significantly more funds from individual donors. The deal would direct the first $2300 of a donation to McCain's campaign, and then direct up to $67,700 to the RNC itself, as well as campaign funds targeted at four crucial swing states. The deal was initially met with scrutiny by campaign finance reform organizations, who complain that McCain is violating the spirit of the law that he helped to create. Nevertheless, the deal has gone forward, and recently both Obama and Clinton reached a similar agreement with the DNC.

The deal makes the fundraising efforts of the national committees particularly important this year. Despite the fundraising success in nearly every other venue, the DNC has been consistently out-raised by the RNC over the past several months. This has been compounded by DNC chairman Howard Dean's investment in a '50-state strategy' meant to lay the foundation for Democratic victories in traditionally Republican communities. While the investment may be paying off -- Democratic special election wins in conservative districts maybe be a signal -- the strategy has left the national committee with fewer funds than Republicans.

It is too early to determine whether or not Democrats will be able to claim a significant money advantage this election, as they are widely expected to do. On the one hand, contributions to Obama are likely to increase once he becomes the official nominee, and his deal with the DNC will allow him to take larger contributions for big donors even while tapping into the vast support of small donors that has powered his campaign.

On the other hand, the fundraising success of the RNC this year suggests Republicans may be able to keep their candidate competitive, particularly if and when President Bush begins to earnestly raise funds for McCain (despite his national unpopularity, the president is still an adept and powerful fundraiser). And if John McCain accepts pubic financing as expected, he would receive $85 million while still allowing his supporters to funnel money directly to the RNC. One thing this early FEC report does suggest, the Democrats are going to have to continue to energize the donors who have supported the long primary battle in order to remain financially competitive.

Barack Obama has been hailed this election season for, among other things, his impressive fundraising apparatus. But while the Democratic frontrunner's financial edge over Republican rival John McCain...
Barack Obama has been hailed this election season for, among other things, his impressive fundraising apparatus. But while the Democratic frontrunner's financial edge over Republican rival John McCain...
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Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 (3 pages total)

Senator Obama did not ask for general election funds, yet, and he is flush with cash for the still ongoing primary. His campaign does not even send out emails to raise money.

As soon as he starts asking for more, I will send him more.

How do you like them apples, GOP?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:12 PM on 05/23/2008
- kdublya I'm a Fan of kdublya 105 fans permalink
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The one thing not mentioned in this analysis is motivation.

Specifically, greed. A good thing.

Sen. Obama's fundraising success is not because technology allows 1:1 relationship with the campaign. It's because people who invest in him (donated) become activist shareholders. The $2300 cap puts a limit on the amount of influence you can purchase. They expect ROI and work towards achieving it.

Sen. Clinton and Sen. McCain don't look at the downside of large donations. They dilute the power of the voting base. If someone wants to donate in excess of $2300 (in this article's example $67,700/$2300 = 30:1) that's a free lunch for 30 people. It's not my money. Easy come easy go. Translation, passive commitment.

The DNC v RNC comparison, although interesting, highlights a competive disadvantage for McCain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 05/23/2008
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Sorry, can you run that by my non-math major brain? I don't get it. (layman's terms please).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:23 PM on 05/23/2008
- kdublya I'm a Fan of kdublya 105 fans permalink
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Don't worry about it.
Just keep stuffing your cheeks with Sen. Clinton's hors d'oeuvres.
Her party will be over soon enough.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 05/23/2008
- robXdion I'm a Fan of robXdion 186 fans permalink
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Doesn't matter if they don't know how to spend it or if people hate them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:06 PM on 05/23/2008
- riley85 I'm a Fan of riley85 2 fans permalink

MCCain will be getting a lot of money from Hillary supporters pretty soon.
That should help.


Hillary or McCain 08

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 PM on 05/23/2008
- Gemma08 I'm a Fan of Gemma08 10 fans permalink
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racist or stupid?

Pick one.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:12 PM on 05/23/2008

Seems like both

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 PM on 05/23/2008
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Third Option: Alien Ninja Robot Nazi

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:24 PM on 05/23/2008
- Charmed I'm a Fan of Charmed 27 fans permalink

riley85, maybe ya'll should concentrate on giving hillary more money NOW so she can get out of debt...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 PM on 05/23/2008
- kdublya I'm a Fan of kdublya 105 fans permalink
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Yeah,

The same Hillary supporters that left her war chest blowing in the breeze.
Who cares where their mouth is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 05/23/2008
- gditty I'm a Fan of gditty 29 fans permalink
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Why can't Hillary supporters give Hillary "lots of money" to get out of debt?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 05/23/2008

whatever..­. you're just a republican troll, not a Hillary supporter. No real democrat would give money to McCain.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 PM on 05/23/2008

To be fair, fundraising for McCain and the RNC should be compared with that for Obama, the DNC, *and Clinton*. Much of the money going to Clinton will soon go to Obama. Also, it's a bit unfair to compare this before Obama officially secures the nomination.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 05/23/2008

I completely agree. Both sides are staying on the sidelines for the DNC, until this is resolved. McCain has had 3 months to pull the full force of the Republican party together.

On another note, the DCCC is far more flush than the RNCC(I'm not sure that is the correct acronym). The RNC will have to put a lot of money into congressional races as well. This is going to be an interesting choice for the Republicans. Given that the Republicans have a sitting President (Whose base is the wealthy), and we haven't picked a nominee yet, the Dems are and great shape. Most of the big Clinton donors will come back, the Obama big donors will give to the DNC when this is officially settled, Obama will be funded by the "little people", and the DCCC will continue to kick butt.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:15 PM on 05/23/2008
- Charmed I'm a Fan of Charmed 27 fans permalink

Not so fast there....w­e are still giving to the person we support. There is only McCain on the other side so everybody is giving to the RNC. Once we end our process we'll be giving to the DNC so enjoy this for the moment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 05/23/2008
- rssrai I'm a Fan of rssrai 14 fans permalink

This story is wrong. Obama ended April with $46 million on hand.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 PM on 05/23/2008
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