Sanders raises $25 million in January, campaign announces Super Tuesday
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[February 06, 2020]
By Simon Lewis
Machester, N.H. (Reuters) - Bernie Sanders
raised $25 million in January toward his run for president, his campaign
said on Thursday as it announced it was sending more staff to the 14
states that vote on March 3 in the Democratic Party's nominating
contest.
Results from Monday's Iowa caucuses showed former South Bend, Indiana,
Mayor Pete Buttigieg narrowly leading Sanders in terms of state delegate
equivalents.
Sanders' campaign said January's haul - from more than 648,000
individuals - was its best in a single month in the campaign. He had
already raised $96 million in 2019, more than any other Democrat running
for president.
The hefty warchest will sustain the progressive 78-year-old senator from
Vermont for a long fight for the nomination to take on Republican
President Donald Trump in a November election.
Trump’s campaign raised a total of $143 million in 2019.
“Working class Americans giving $18 at a time are putting our campaign
in a strong position to compete in states all over the map,” Faiz Shakir,
Sanders' campaign manager, said in a statement.
More than $5.5 million will be spent on television and digital
advertising in 10 of the Super Tuesday states, including the key
battlegrounds of California and Texas where Sanders had already run ads,
his campaign said. The statement did not mention how many staff would be
deployed to the states voting in March.
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Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders speaks
to voters at a town hall campaign event in Derry, New Hampshire,
U.S., February 5, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar - RC2IUE983AC2/File Photo
The other 10 Democrats running for president have not yet announced
their January fundraising figures.
Billionaire businessman Michael Bloomberg said on Tuesday he would
increase his staff to 2,100 people and double TV ad spending after
delays to the release of Iowa's results meant a clear winner had not
emerged from the first-in-the-nation contest.
Bloomberg, who only declared his candidacy in November and opted to
skip the early voting states, has already spent more than a quarter
of a billion dollars of his own fortune on advertising largely
targeting the Super Tuesday states.
(Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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