Trump's fundraising for presidential bid gets off to modest start
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[February 01, 2023]
By Jason Lange
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Donald Trump's bid for the Republican
presidential nomination in 2024 got off to a modest fundraising start,
with his campaign ending the year with about $7 million on hand while
his Save America fund had about $18 million, according to financial
disclosures released on Tuesday.
After launching his third consecutive run for the White House on Nov.
15, a week after a weaker-than-expected Republican performance in
midterm congressional elections, the former U.S. President did little
campaigning, not hitting the trail until this Saturday.
Tuesday's filings with the Federal Election Commission suggest that
Trump's fundraising was also sluggish, leaving him with a far smaller
war chest than the more than $100 million Save America had on hand
through early 2022.
Trump remained a prodigious fundraiser after leaving office in January
2021, holding regular rallies in which he repeated his false claims that
his loss to Democratic President Joe Biden was the result of widespread
fraud.
But the Save America group that served as his main fundraising arm was
registered to fund other campaigns, not Trump's own. That poses legal
problems if Trump seeks to use Save America funds on his own campaign.
Last year Save America transferred some $60 million to a pro-Trump Super
PAC group which is expected to support his presidential run. The
Campaign Legal Center, a nonpartisan watchdog group, has asked election
regulators to probe Save America's money transfers.
Save America's financial disclosure on Tuesday showed the group spent
more than $3 million on lawyer fees in the final weeks of the 2022.
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Former U.S. President Donald Trump
speaks during a campaign stop to unveil his leadership team, at the
South Carolina State House in Columbia, South Carolina, U.S.,
January 28, 2023. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Trump remains the Republican party's most popular figure and is the
only major candidate to have declared his intention to challenge
Biden, who has not yet formally launched his own reelection
campaign. But Trump could face challengers for the nomination,
notably Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.
He also faces a series of legal risks, including a possible
investigation into hush money payments to porn star Stormy Daniels
during his 2016 presidential campaign.
Trump on Saturday visited two early-voting states and held notably
muted events. In contrast to the raucous rallies in front of
thousands of devotees that Trump has held in the past, he spoke to
about 200 people in South Carolina's capitol building.
In its disclosure to election regulators, Trump's official campaign
committee reported raising $3.8 million between Nov. 15 and Dec. 31,
ending the year with $3 million in the bank.
Most of that money was raised through another Trump fundraising
group called the Trump Save America Joint Fundraising Committee,
which reported having an additional $3.8 million in the bank at the
end of the year.
(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Scott Malone and Christian
Schmollinger)
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