2024 GOP Hopefuls Reach Fundraising Milestone – Check Their Raised Funds
2024 GOP Contenders Hit First Major Fundraising Cutoff – Here’s How Much Money They’ve Raised
With the second quarter fundraising reporting deadline approaching, several 2024 Republican hopefuls have already announced their totals — providing a glimpse at the strength of their respective campaigns.
Candidates must file their July quarterly with the Federal Election Commission by end of day on Saturday.
For several candidates, this will be the first financial indicator of their candidacies ahead of the first presidential debate in August.
The campaigns of former President Donald Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum and former Vice President Mike Pence have already announced their Q2 totals.
“The FEC reports are the MRI scan of a campaign,” Mike Murphy, a GOP strategist, told The New York Times. “It’s the next-best thing to breaking into the headquarters and checking the files.”
Burgum is the only Republican presidential candidate so far who has filed his second-quarter totals with the FEC, reporting that he raised $11.7 million. The governor gave his own campaign approximately $10.2 million, raised $1.5 million from outside contributors and has about $3.7 million cash on hand.
Trump and his joint fundraising committee, the “Save America PAC,” brought in a combined $35 million during the third fundraising quarter of his third presidential campaign, they reported July 5. DeSantis reported on July 6 to have raised $20 million, but combined with Never Back Down, the super PAC supporting his candidacy, the campaign totaled $150 million since his campaign launched in late May.
Haley and aligned super PAC SFA Fund, Inc., raised $26 million during her second quarter as a presidential candidate, they announced Monday. Scott and super PAC, Trust In the Mission (TIM PAC), said Wednesday that they raised a total of approximately $25.4 million, and Scott reported having $21 million cash on hand since his late May campaign announcement.
Will candidates drop out after the filing deadline?
- Yes
- No
“The most important number is cash on hand, minus debt,” Murphy told the Times. “You see how much financial firepower they actually have.”
Pence and his super PAC, Committed to America, reported Friday to have raised a combined $3.85 million during the first fundraising quarter of his campaign.
So Grateful to the thousands of Americans who have already Donated to Pence for President! We need 40,000 donors to qualify for the first GOP Presidential Debate & You Can Help! Donate $1 RIGHT NOW & We will See You on the Debate Stage in August #Pence2024 https://t.co/NYOplB8K9i
— Mike Pence (@Mike_Pence) July 10, 2023
The campaigns of former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, Miami Mayor Francis Suarez, former Texas Rep. Will Hurd, businessman Vivek Ramaswamy and conservative radio personality Larry Elder have not yet released their second-quarter totals.
President Joe Biden’s campaign announced it raised over $72 million during the first fundraising quarter of his re-election campaign, outpacing all of the GOP hopefuls’ Q2 totals.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. filed his second quarter totals with the FEC on Friday, bringing his campaign to approximately $6.37 million with $4.5 million cash on hand since his April campaign launch.
The campaigns’ second quarter totals won’t be fully known until after all of the candidates report to the FEC by the Saturday deadline, as super PACs file by the end of the month, according to the Times.
The number of individual contributors also won’t be included in the filings, which is crucial for Republican candidates who have to meet the Republican National Committee’s 40,000 unique donor threshold to make the debate stage in August.
“Nobody stops running for president because they think their ideas are no longer good enough, or they’re not qualified,” Terry Sullivan, a Republican strategist, told the Times.
“People stop running for president for one reason, and one reason only: It’s because they run out of money.”
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