Obama Strengthens Fundraising Edge
February FEC Reports Show He Has More Cash On Hand Over Clinton
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Reports filed with the FEC showed that Barack Obama set a single-month fundraising record in February, with more than $55 million in contributions. (AP)
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Interactive The Money Race See the latest campaign finance tallies from Obama and McCain.
Obama's campaign spent at a rate of nearly $1.5 million a day in February, a crucial month that began with the Feb. 5 Super Tuesday and ended with both candidates marching to a showdown March 4 in Texas and Ohio. Clinton, riding her best fundraising period yet, spent about $1 million a day on average.
But reports filed with the Federal Election commission late Thursday showed that Obama set a single-month fundraising record, with more than $55 million in contributions.
Both Democrats ended up with more than $30 million in the bank, but Clinton can't use two-thirds of her cash on hand because it's only for the general election. That and her debt left her with less than $3 million in the black. The debt doesn't include the $5 million she lent her campaign in January.
Obama's fundraising juggernaut is unprecedented and gave him a significant advantage this month as they prepared for a confrontation in Pennsylvania on April 22. Obama's spending edge continued into March. An analysis of ad spending between Feb. 10 and March 10 by TNS Media Intelligence/CMAG had Obama spending $17 million to Clinton's $8.6 million.
Republican John McCain reported raising $11 million in February, a slight dip from January but still a better fundraising clip than he had last year. Now, as the presumed GOP nominee, McCain has embarked on an aggressive fundraising schedule in March to finance his campaign against the Democrats, whoever their nominee might be.
McCain reported $8 million cash on hand - $3 million of which is for the general election. At month's end, McCain still owed $3 million on a loan, but he paid that off this week, aides said.
Obama, as the delegate and money leader in the race, has found himself staving off both Clinton and McCain in recent weeks. His campaign underscored the challenge in a fundraising appeal Thursday.
"No one could have imagined it would go on this long, or that we'd have to fight this battle on two fronts at the same time," Obama campaign manager David Plouffe wrote in an e-mail to potential donors. "We've got to take on both Senator Clinton and Senator McCain at the same time."
In a testament to the financial heft behind the Democrats, Obama and Clinton together spent more in a month than McCain has for the length of the yearlong campaign.The Money Race
Check out February tallies for Clinton, Obama and McCain.
McCain has now spent $58.4 million in his primary bid, surpassing the $50 million limit he would have faced if he participated in the public financing system he had been certified to join. McCain has decided not to accept the public matching funds, but the FEC wants him to assure regulators that he did not use the promise of public money as collateral for the loan.
McCain and his lawyers said the loan was secured with other assets, thus freeing him to spend as much money as he wishes on his primary campaign. The Democratic National Committee has filed a complaint with the FEC arguing McCain cannot withdraw from the public finance system without FEC approval. The FEC for now can't act, however, because four of its six seats are vacant.
While eschewing public funds for the primary, McCain has called on Obama to accept public financing with him for the fall campaign. Such a step would limit both candidates to about $85 million to be spent from September to Election Day in November. Obama has hedged, setting several conditions before he would consider taking public money. Few Democrats believe Obama should abandon his prodigious fundraising, which could generate far more than the public funding would permit.
McCain is keeping his options open. Last month he filed documents to create a "compliance fund" - an account used by publicly financed candidates so they can accept private donations to cover legal expenses and other exempted costs.
This week, McCain had faced questions over a government-paid trip to the Middle East and Europe that included a fundraising luncheon in London. On Thursday, his campaign said it would reimburse the federal government about $3,000 for political travel expenses incurred during the trip.
Under terms reviewed by the FEC and the Senate ethics committee, McCain will reimburse the government for a one-night stay at a London hotel and first-class airfare from Washington to London because he attended a $1,000-per-person fundraising lunch there. McCain had already agreed to pay more than $2,000 for the flight home.
Democratic National Committee General Counsel Joe Sandler said Thursday that McCain should cover a greater portion of the trip with his campaign funds.
Former candidates also filed FEC reports Thursday. Republican Mitt Romney, the multimillionaire former governor of Massachusetts, borrowed $2 million on the eve of Super Tuesday Feb. 5 in a last-ditch attempt to save his campaign. He bowed out two days later. Romney, who had already lent his campaign $42.3 million of his own, borrowed the money from Goldman Sachs & Co. and secured it with personal assets held at the investment firm, according to his report.
Mike Huckabee, who ended his Republican campaign March 4, reported raising $3 million in February. He spent $3.3 million during the month, half of it on television advertising and charter air travel even as McCain appeared to be the certain Republican winner.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- Feb.: Obama, Clinton spent $2.5M a day.
Wow that would pay for alot of health care. - Reply to this comment
- Yeah and Who was crying the loadest about passport
and the head of stanly analysis corp. is on Obama''s
campaign committee must be a firend of Rev.Wright"s - Reply to this comment
- Obama won "Red States" with G.O.P. Money and Crossover Voting to take out Clinton, promote newcomer Obama.
According to an article in Time magazine published last November, Republicans have been organized in 14 states to VOTE Senator Barack Obama. At least three former fundraisers for President Bush flushed his coffers with cash early on in the race, something the deep pockets had not done for any candidate in their own party. With receipts topping $100 million in 2007, the first-term Illinois senator broke the record for contributions. It was a remarkable feat, considering that most Americans had not even heard of him before 2005.
The Time article went on to explain that rank and file Republicans were switching parties this spring to vote for Obama in the Democratic primaries. Though not mentioned in the piece, a group called Republicans for Obama formed in 2006 to expedite the strategy, and the Obama campaign launched its own "Be a Democrat For a Day" campaign in 2007.
If, Obama wins the nomination (or even the VP spot), Rove''''s prospects brighten considerably. Largely unvetted by the media, the senator carries considerable baggage from his stint as a state legislator, particularly his 17-year relationship with Chicago slumlord Tony Rezko. So far, the mainstream press has paid lip service to the particulars of Obama''''s past and instead portrays him as a fresh new face in American politics.[thecityedition.com] - Reply to this comment
- Where is all the Democrat & McCain outrage over all this money? The only campaign finance law needed is an open accounting of who donates & how much they donate.
- Reply to this comment
- Good for Barack. He will need all this money to buy out YouTube.
- Reply to this comment
- ATTENTION READERS: The McCain hate-machine is slinking around this comment board. A 24/7 operation of you''ll know their posts deceit and division when you see them.
Read and cringe, and when you''ve had enough, turn the page. Obama 2008 - Reply to this comment
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqPUXjFYh38
Check out the link above....
Just Shameful...Completely Shameful!!!! - Reply to this comment
- Check this out ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqPUXjFYh38 ) Its all just shameful...Shameful
- Reply to this comment
- Check this out ....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqPUXjFYh38
Shameful ....Completely Shameful......!!! - Reply to this comment
- Check This Out ...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FqPUXjFYh38
Just Shameful...Completely Shameful! - Reply to this comment
- OH I''m sure he has his drug dealing gang bangers out selling drugs for his fun raiser. Thats why he''s raised so much money...Resko probably slipped a few hundred thousand under his rug...Wright and Farrahkan had an anti-american rallie last night and gave 40 million......:O
- Reply to this comment
- It would cost money to re-ro Michigan and Florida primaries--and Obama has the money.
Whoever wins the Democratic nomination must then go back thru Michighan and Florida and actually get their votes to win the election and become President.
Whoever says at this point that the citizens in those states don''''t matter vote wise (in the past or in a new primary in each state)can''''t expect their vote in the future.
The person who does not want to hear from these states is Obama.
Right now counts. - Reply to this comment
- Can someone explain to me how they would be willing the vote for someone that is unable to balance their financial books, during the Democratic race. What do you expect if that person was to win the nomination?
Oh well that question will be mute soon so forget i ask! Obama 08, courage to take a stand!! - Reply to this comment
- OMG - After raising $35mil last month Hillary''s still $2mil in debt?!? How is that possible?????
- Reply to this comment
- And despite the media''s pummeling of Obama over Pastor Wright, and the Clinton campaign''s repeated attempts at race-baiting, while spending her monies as fast as she raises it, she''s managed to nearly pull neck and neck!
This is closer to reality than the HRC supporter''s post. From an independent viewer of events. - Reply to this comment
- And yet, despite the Media''s pummeling of Hillary, and Obama''s race-baiting, and more money..She''s still neck and neck.
FIGHT - Reply to this comment

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