Republican
Carly Fiorina raises $6.8 million since July
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[October 14, 2015]
By Ginger Gibson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Republican
Carly Fiorina's campaign has raised $6.8 million since July, the
campaign said on Tuesday - nearly quintupling the cash raised from her
second quarter filings.
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Before two standout performances in the Republican debates,
Fiorina, a former Hewlett Packard chief executive, had struggled
during the spring to round up enough cash to stay in the race.
She had spent months languishing at the bottom of the polls, but has
since moved into second or third position in most surveys, thanks in
part to her highly praised willingness to take on Republican
front-runner Donald Trump.
Although Fiorina's fundraising haul has greatly improved - she
raised just $1.4 million for her campaign and $4.8 million for her
Super PAC, CARLY for America, between May and June - she remains far
behind some of her Republican rivals.
Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, who now trails Fiorina in the
polls, brought in more than $100 million in the first half the year.
While Republican Ben Carson, a fellow political "outsider" who
remains ahead of Fiorina in most polls, reported a third-quarter
haul of more than $20 million.
Fiorina has $5.5 million in cash remaining going into the last three
months of the year, her spokeswoman, Sarah Isgur Flores, said in a
tweet thanking supporters.
As the campaign moves closer to seeing votes cast in the early
primary states of Iowa and New Hampshire, candidates will begin
spending more heavily for television advertising and voter outreach.
Cash-flush contenders like Bush will be able to flood the airwaves
in the crucial early states, and some have already begun reserving
airtime in key regions.
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Fiorina's surge in the polls after the last debate and her position
as an outsider who has never held public office before have helped
her to save much of her campaign cash. But if the other candidates
begin spending more heavily, Fiorina will likely to be forced to
respond - and being at the top of the pack makes her a more likely
target.
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson; Additional reporting Alana Wise;
Editing by Sandra Maler)
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