Four sources familiar with the fundraising effort told Reuters
that figure had been banked for Harris in the four weeks since
she jumped into the race on July 21.
Campaign cash is critical for advertising and get-out-the-vote
efforts that help bring people to the polls and persuade
undecided voters to swing a candidate's way.
Harris entered the fray after President Joe Biden stepped aside
from the top of the Democratic ticket, unleashing floods of
funding that had dried up in the weeks after Biden's disastrous
debate against Republican Donald Trump.
Harris raised $200 million in the first week of her campaign
while she quickly wrapped up support to become the party's
nominee.
Harris' team raised $310 million in July, bringing the total
amount of money raised by her and Biden before he dropped out to
more than $1 billion, the most rapid crossing of that
fundraising threshold in history, according to the campaign.
Trump's campaign said it raised $138.7 million in July and had
cash on hand of $327 million. The former president's campaign
outraised Biden in the second quarter.
Enthusiasm for Harris, whose July cash on hand came in at $377
million, has continued into August, manifested by donations from
small-dollar donors as thousands of people show up to her
rallies in political swing states across the country.
Biden's campaign committee raised $1.04 billion in the 2020
election cycle or $1.62 billion when combined with outside
groups, according to OpenSecrets, a group that tracks money in
politics.
Harris lauded Biden on Monday on the first night of the
Democratic National Convention in Chicago, where the president,
in his own remarks, touted his record and urged voters to back
Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, in
November.
Former President Barack Obama, who is also a big fundraising
draw, addresses the convention on Tuesday night, while Harris
rallies voters in nearby Wisconsin.
Obama attended two high-profile fundraisers with Biden and has
offered to help Harris with more.
Harris has repeatedly called herself an underdog in the race
against Trump, in the hopes of preventing complacency among her
voting and donor base.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Nandita Bose; Editing by Howard
Goller)
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