Democrat Warren swears off high-dollar fundraisers if she gets
presidential nomination
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[October 10, 2019]
By Joseph Ax
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. Senator Elizabeth
Warren vowed to abstain from high-dollar fundraisers if she becomes the
Democratic presidential nominee in 2020, extending into the general
election campaign her promise not to hold such events during the primary
season.
Warren told CBS News in an interview posted online on Tuesday that she
would skip big-money fundraisers, regardless of how much Republican
President Donald Trump raises for his reelection campaign.
The declaration represented a shift in her previous stance. The
Massachusetts senator had said earlier this year that her decision to
forgo expensive fundraisers only applied to the Democratic nominating
contest.
"The problem is, so long as it's the wealthy and well connected who
finance the presidential elections, we're going to continue to have a
government that works really great for the wealthy and well connected,"
she told CBS. "I'm not going to go do the big-dollar fundraisers. I'm
just not going to do it. The whole notion behind this campaign is that
we can build this together, and that's exactly what we're doing."
Warren has been able to raise millions of dollars so far, despite
eschewing pricey fundraisers, where wealthy donors who give thousands of
dollars have the chance to meet candidates.
Her campaign reported raising $24.6 million in the third quarter of
2019, slightly behind the $25.3 million raised by U.S. Senator Bernie
Sanders, the only other Democrat of the 19 running to swear off
traditional fundraisers.
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U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Senator Elizabeth Warren
(D-MA) arrives onstage during a forum held by gun safety
organizations the Giffords group and March For Our Lives in Las
Vegas, Nevada, U.S. October 2, 2019. REUTERS/Steve Marcus
Big-money events matter far more in the general election, when
individual donors can donate more than $100,000 to attend events
hosted by a joint fundraising committee that benefits both the
nominee and the national party.
Trump and the national Republican Party together raised $125 million
in the third quarter, taking advantage of higher contribution limits
that joint fundraising allows.
In a statement, a spokeswoman for Warren's campaign made it clear
that Warren would still attend fundraisers that benefit national,
state and local Democratic parties as well as other candidates in
the general election. Warren plans to headline a Democratic National
Committee big-ticket fundraiser next week, the second time she has
done so in recent months.
Warren said on Twitter on Wednesday that she would "do everything I
can to build our party infrastructure and strengthen Democratic
candidates up and down the ballot" if she wins the nomination.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and David
Gregorio)
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