WASHINGTON, Dec. 5, 2008

Obama Amassed $745M For Campaign

Campaign Says 4 Million Contributed, But Nonpartisan Group Finds Majority Of Funds Came From Larger Donors

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(AP)  Barack Obama, who rewrote the book on presidential fundraising, amassed more than $745 million during his marathon campaign, more than twice the amount obtained by his rival, Republican John McCain.

In his latest finance report, Mr. Obama reported raising $104 million in more than five weeks immediately before and after Election Day. It was his second biggest fundraising period and a fitting coda to a successful presidential bid that shattered fundraising records.

In the end, Mr. Obama still had $30 million left over.

Overall, Mr. Obama exceeded the combined finances of the two major parties' nominees four years ago. George W. Bush and John Kerry pulled in a total of $653 million in the 2004 primary and general election campaigns, including federal public financing money.

Mr. Obama's prowess at attracting money, one of the many characteristics that defined his campaign, could well spell the end of a 30-year experiment in public financing of presidential contests.

After initially vowing to take public funds if McCain did, Mr. Obama became the first presidential candidate since the campaign finance reforms of the 1970s to raise private donations during the general election.

The final numbers underscore how pivotal the two candidates' strategies were for funding their general election campaigns: McCain accepted $84 million in taxpayer money through the public financing system; Mr. Obama gambled that he could raise far more from private money.

The two campaigns spent identical amounts in June, $25.6 million each. But from there the numbers diverged widely in September and October when the Obama financial juggernaut swamped McCain. By the end, the Democrat was outspending his rival four to one. The reports submitted by the campaigns on Thursday covered the period from Oct. 15 to Nov. 24.

McCain relied heavily on the Republican National Committee to help narrow the financial discrepancy. But even with the party resources Mr. Obama had a vast money advantage.

The party committee couldn't escape one of its most awkward moments of the campaign. After spending nearly $150,000 on clothing and accessories for McCain's running mate Sarah Palin in September, the party reported spending more than $23,000 in additional accessories in the latest finance document. The spending ranged from $4,384 at Saks Fifth Ave. to $2,130 at Nieman Marcus to small purchases at Wal-Mart and CVS.

Party spokesman Alex Conant said Thursday that the expenditures listed in the party's October and December reports "were the result of coordinated expenditures at the campaign's direction."

"Accessories have been returned, inventoried, and will be appropriately dispersed to various charities," Conant said.

The RNC reported raising $75 million during the latest reporting period. Overall this year, the party committee raised $322 million. It ended with $13.5 million cash on hand. The Democratic National Committee reported raising $36.5 million in its latest filing, for a total of $186 million for the year. The party had $8.7 million cash on hand, but it also reported owing $5 million on a line of credit.

Mr. Obama's campaign said nearly 4 million donors contributed to his campaign.

But while Mr. Obama has made much of his large number of donors, the nonpartisan Campaign Finance Institute found that Obama collected about 26 percent of his total haul from people who gave less than $200 - about the same as President George W. Bush did in his 2004 campaign.

And like other campaigns, Mr. Obama's relied for nearly half of its fundraising on big donors, those who gave $1,000 or more, a finding that "should make one think twice before describing small donors as the financial engine of the Obama campaign," the institute reported.

Mr. Obama reported having nearly $30 million in the bank at the end of the reporting period and nearly $600,000 in debts. McCain reported $4 million in the bank, nearly $5 million in debts and $1 million owed to the campaign committee. McCain also filed a report for a compliance fund, used to cover expenses associated with his acceptance of public funds. He reported $25 million left over in that account.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by cheteunice December 7, 2008 12:42 PM EST
The buying of the Presidency!
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by downsteamjim December 6, 2008 7:27 PM EST
745 million dollars; like Obama said, that''s a lot of change.
Reply to this comment
by davewrite1 December 5, 2008 11:35 PM EST
Of course, many people contributed less than $200 to Obama''s campaign. If 4 million people gave just $187, he''d have his 750 million. Obviously, with so many large donors, his contributors had only to give small amounts.

The reasons why GWB was easily America''s worst president had to do with his stupidity and criminality -- not to mention that his brand of capitalism (with the help of a host of war mongers, neoconservatives, and masters of the universe, have nearly sunk the American ship.

Reply to this comment
by notblue December 5, 2008 8:37 PM EST
zoe-2009, you must back up your statement with particulars, why in your opinion will Bush be characterized as the worste president in history? Some historians may differ with your opinion, time will tell, you must realize that political ideology and hard fact are two different things. Just because you hate him baesd on ideology doesn''t mean history will villify him. If Iraq turns out to be a succes and the middle east stabalizes because of this fledgling democracy then he may turn out to be one of the best. At this point it''s all speculation.
Reply to this comment
by ioweign December 5, 2008 7:56 PM EST
IOWEGIAN, name one thing, other than investigate their political rivals, the Dems have accomplished the last eight years. Not including voting for the Iraq war.

Posted by notblue at 04:41 PM : Dec 05, 2008


Democratic Accomplishments in a Republican-Controlled Senate

November 24, 2003

Despite Republican control of the Senate, Democrats have continued the fight to make a difference for all our families. Highlights of Democratic measures that passed the Senate in the 108th Congress include:

* increased combat pay and other support for the National Guard and Reserves;

* full concurrent receipt of disability compensation and retirement pension for all disabled veterans;

* tax fairness for military and foreign service personnel;

* disapproval of the Federal Communications Commission decision to relax media ownership rules;

* a fair extension of the child tax credit; and

* a moratorium on Bush Administration plan to drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.


Let''s not forget the New GI Bill...
Reply to this comment
by notblue December 5, 2008 7:41 PM EST
IOWEGIAN, name one thing, other than investigate their political rivals, the Dems have accomplished the last eight years. Not including voting for the Iraq war.
Reply to this comment
by ioweign December 5, 2008 7:39 PM EST
So...
--------------------------------------
----------------------------------------
--
Posted by IOWEIGN

See, this is how blind followers think. Anything and everything is okay just as long as the leader of their cult wins.
Obama-man said to everyone (even his blind followers) that he would use public funds if McCain would. McCain did. So then, the messiah simply did the exact opposite of what he said. Most rational people would classify that as lying. A blind follower will say, "so?".

Posted by fahr451 at 04:36 PM : Dec 05, 2008

Gee...if Cheney can use "So!" as an answer - I can too...
Reply to this comment
by ioweign December 5, 2008 7:38 PM EST
zoe, were there any Dems in congress for the last 8 years? Guess not! At least from your perspective.

Posted by notblue at 04:03 PM : Dec 05, 2008


Evidently not enough to override any Republican filibuster or vetoes.

How many vetoes were there from 01.20.01 to 01.20.07 ??
Reply to this comment
by ioweign December 5, 2008 7:34 PM EST
Mr. President-Erect,

I want my free stuff on Jan 20! Will you be driving the delivery truck with my freebies? I will be waiting as I have made room in my garage for the free stuff you promised. I will toss you a beer if I see you. I pray to you every night as I%u2019ve kicked Jesus from my life and replaced him with YOU! I will leave my mortgage bill in the garage and 2, 5 gallon gas drums for you to fill every week. Thank you in advance for ending all wars, fixing the environment, saving the economy and curing all diseases. Thanks for my something for nothing messiah Obama!!
Yours Truly,
A Democrat For Life
Joe Dunce


Posted by TheMajority1 at 03:37 PM : Dec 05, 2008




I bet your address is on "Wall St."...


Reply to this comment
by ioweign December 5, 2008 7:32 PM EST
Obama Amassed $745M For Campaign


#####


So...
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by notblue December 5, 2008 7:03 PM EST
zoe, were there any Dems in congress for the last 8 years? Guess not! At least from your perspective.
Reply to this comment
by wardoglrs December 5, 2008 6:37 PM EST
If you think that this amount of money should remain as a standard think again people this is far more dangerous than you can imagine.

"The problems we face today cannot be solved by the minds that created them" Albert Einstein

It is surely time for men to think for themselves, and to throw off the authority of names so artificially magnified.
-- Thomas Jefferson,
Reply to this comment
by jt_lancer December 5, 2008 5:47 PM EST
How curious is it that Obama PROMISED to participate in public financing for his campaign, which would have severely restricted his ability to collect private money... Until he realized that he could raise WAY more funds by opting out of it? I guess that was his FIRST lie to the American people.
Reply to this comment
by jt_lancer December 5, 2008 5:21 PM EST
The best government that money can buy!
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by mjsjohnson67 December 5, 2008 4:56 PM EST
For all you ... Republicans, racists and bible thumpers ... Get over it!!!
Reply to this comment
by whitemale08 December 5, 2008 4:34 PM EST
Bush and Cheney has mis-managed this country and its economy so bad that we''ve managed to elect a black man with a Muslim name.

That''s how bad Republican ''trickle-down'' idealogy is.
Reply to this comment
by drputt45 December 5, 2008 4:21 PM EST
My daddy use to say "In God we trust, all others pay cash." Still fits, except the cash ain''t so easy to get ahold of.
Reply to this comment
by tycobb111 December 5, 2008 4:12 PM EST
notblue,

finally someone making some sense here.
Reply to this comment
by notblue December 5, 2008 4:08 PM EST
christ truth, your wasting your time with these libs, it''s their way or the highway. They think that because Obama won by 3% they have some kind of mandate. They refuse to admit the 55 million votes mcCain received were more than were needed to elect the last three presidents. If not for 745 million in donations, the leftwing media in the tank, and every elligable black person in America voting for race even blacks and minorities who have never participated previously. Having said that the libs who think this country was "destroyed" over the last eight years have no clue or ability to look at the big picture and what hashappened over the last three decades. It is not surprising given the fact that these same libs have been able to idiotically blame one man for situations that are outofourcontrol. it was amazing to witness how effective propaghanda machines like move.on could sway the sheep. If anything the deteriation of America can be blamed directly on this liberal progressive movement, which created the recent phenomenon of school shootings due to the removal of disciline, consequences for actions, the displacement of blame which we read on these posts daily, the gray area of personal responsiblity, and the blaming of america for attrocities committed by other countries and ideologies.
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by candy-apple December 5, 2008 3:56 PM EST
He can redistribute the remainder of his donations to the taxpayers of the country and call it a "BAILOUT"!!
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