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Hillary leads
2008 money chase with $27million
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—Democrat Hillary Clinton raised $27 million for her 2008
presidential bid in the third quarter, leading all rivals and
strengthening her position ahead of the field three months before the
first votes.
Clinton’s campaign on Tuesday reported raising $22 million for the
primary nomination race that begins in January and another $5 million
for the general campaign ahead of the November 2008 election.
Her fundraising beat top rival Barack Obama, the first-term Illinois
senator who raised $19 million in primary money and another $1 million
in general election funds in the quarter that ended on Sunday.
The strong performance defied historical trends for the third quarter,
when presidential candidates typically raise less money as they compete
for attention with summer vacations.
“Hillary wanted you to know that this was our best quarter yet,” her
campaign manager, Patty Solis Doyle, said in an e-mail to supporters.
“This is the moment when your dedication defied the skeptics.”
Clinton, the New York senator and former first lady, has taken a big
lead in recent months over her Democratic rivals in national opinion
polls and solidified her grip on the frontrunner’s slot in the 2008
race.
But Obama has shown his own signs of strength, raising more money than
Clinton in the second financial quarter and building a list of more than
350,000 donors. The Clinton campaign reported adding 100,000 new donors
during the quarter.
Obama nearly matched Clinton in primary fundraising in the third
quarter, a spokesman said. He criticized Clinton’s refusal to stop
taking money from federal lobbyists.
“We have raised a historic $74.9 million in dollars available for
primary spending, without transferring one cent from any other campaign
fund and with no money from federal lobbyists or PACs,” Obama spokesman
Bill Burton said.
Candidates for president must report their fund-raising activity every
three months. The third quarter ended at midnight on Sunday, and
detailed financial reports must be submitted to the Federal Election
Commission by October 15.
Those reports will offer detailed breakdowns on the spending and savings
rates of each campaign and how much cash they have left for the final
three-month push to the first votes in Iowa in early January. The
Clinton campaign did not say how much money it had in the bank at the
end of September.
Donors can give up to $2,300 to finance the primary race and another
$2,300 for the general election if the candidate gets the nomination.
Clinton and Obama’s other rivals for the Democratic nomination have
reported much lower third-quarter fundraising totals, led by 2004 vice
presidential nominee John Edwards, who took in $7 million. No
Republicans have reported their third-quarter fundraising yet.
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