Biden 2024 campaign says it has $77 million in the bank
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[July 15, 2023]
By Trevor Hunnicutt and Nandita Bose
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden's 2024 re-election team
said on Friday that it and his Democratic Party raised $72 million
during the first quarter since the campaign launched, lending firepower
to his efforts to seek a second term.
Biden, who launched his campaign on April 25, had $77 million in cash on
hand at the end of June across several affiliated fundraising entities
and the Democratic Party.
Those funds give him the ability to push out advertisements in
politically competitive swing states and start to build out a campaign
team ahead of what could be more than a $1 billion campaign and the most
expensive race in history.
The Republican front-runner, former President Donald Trump, raised more
than $35 million during the April-June period, a campaign official had
said. Florida Governor and Republican presidential candidate Ron
DeSantis raised $20 million in the same period, his campaign said.
Biden has one key advantage that his Republican would-be opponents do
not: the backing and fundraising muscle of his party. He is not expected
to face a serious challenge for his party's nomination and his allies
run the Democratic National Committee's operations. Republicans,
meanwhile, are spending some of their campaign funds on their fight
against each other.
The closely watched Biden fundraising numbers are viewed as a test of
enthusiasm among both grassroots and wealthy donors for Biden, 80, who
fought doubts about his age in deciding to seek another four-year term
in 2024. Biden defeated Trump in the 2020 election.
His figures compare with $105 million raised by then-President Trump and
the Republican National Committee in the second quarter of 2019 as well
as $86 million raised by President Barack Obama and the DNC in 2011.
Trump launched his campaign in June that year but had already started
raising money, while Obama launched his campaign on April 4. That meant
Obama had more time than Biden to raise money for the quarter, though
there were lower caps on what donors were allowed to contribute under
the law at the time.
The figures distributed by campaigns do not include the substantial
spending done by outside super political action committees (super PACs)
that also support the candidates.
The Biden campaign is required to submit more detailed financial records
to the Federal Election Commission by Saturday.
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US President Joe Biden listens during a
meeting with Nordic leaders (not pictured) at the Presidential
Palace in Helsinki, Finland, July 13, 2023. Ritzau Scanpix/Ida Marie
Odgaard/via REUTERS
"While Republicans are burning through resources in a divisive
primary focused on who can take the most extreme MAGA positions, we
are significantly outraising every single one of them - because our
team's strength is our grassroots supporters," said Julie Chavez
Rodriguez, Biden's campaign manager, in a statement.
Chavez Rodriguez has been running a lean operation, with just a
handful of aides, often working remotely, no ribbon-cutting a
headquarters and no spate of operatives fanning out across the dozen
or so most decisive states.
The campaign has been holding more fundraising events for the
wealthy than political rallies for the public, with 38 such
fundraisers as Biden traveled around the country to small group
events with top contributors. The campaign named top fundraiser and
former Disney executive Jeffrey Katzenberg as a campaign co-chair in
a sign of how important cash hauls would be to Biden's effort.
Katzenberg said this is the first real test of the popularity and
support for Biden. "He has raised more dollars, faster than any
candidate ever."
"It's not just a vote of confidence, but a vote of support, when
nearly 400,000 grassroots supporters write a check," he told
Reuters.
The decision to run lean could help the campaign weather a grueling
16-month campaign without exhausting its resources, leaving more to
the crucial final months.
But the campaign could also miss early opportunities to build an
organization, relationships and outreach in key states from
Pennsylvania to Michigan and Georgia. Just 40% of Americans approve
of Biden's presidency, with the economy chief among their concerns,
a Reuters/Ipsos poll showed this week.
The campaign said the second-quarter donations came from 394,000
donors and that 30% were new contributors since the 2020 campaign.
When asked for a comment on Biden's fundraising, Trump campaign
spokesman Steven Cheung criticized Biden's record and said Trump
enjoyed the support of "a wide range of Americans" but did not
address the gap in their fundraising totals.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt and Nandita Bose in Washington,
Additional reporting by Nathan Layne Editing by Alistair Bell)
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