McCain, GOP report $96 million in cash
The candidate now has 600,000 donors compared to Obama's two million
![]() Mary Altaffer / AP Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., center, arrives in Gypsum, Colo. with his wife Cindy, Thursday, Aug. 14, 2008. |
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Race for the presidency The trips, the speeches, and the moments of Decision ’08. A look at the campaigns of Barack Obama and John McCain. more photos |
WASHINGTON - John McCain and the Republican National Committee started August with a hefty $96 million, financially flush and strongly positioned to compete with prolific fundraiser Barack Obama and the Democrats.
Republicans have been trying to even out the financial playing field in the race for the presidency after trailing Democrats in overall fundraising for most of the election cycle.
McCain has been a subpar fundraiser and has lagged behind the much-more adept Obama in monthly campaign tallies. But the RNC, with big-draw President George W. Bush helping, has trounced its Democratic counterpart in collections. That has helped McCain and the Republican Party stay competitive financially with Obama and the Democratic National Committee.
The July numbers reflect how far McCain and the Republicans have come.
McCain raised $27 million in July, his largest one-month fundraising haul since clinching the Republican presidential nomination, and had $21 million available to spend, while the RNC brought in nearly $26 million, and had $75 million on hand to compete with the Democrats.
McCain, himself, now has 600,000 donors, while the party announced it had reached 1 million.
By comparison, Obama alone recently surpassed 2 million contributors, giving him a larger pool of donors to hit up for money again. He and the DNC have not yet disclosed their monthly takes.
"Our fundraising continues to be very healthy," Rick Davis, McCain's campaign manager, said in a conference call with reporters, noting that July was the fifth-straight month McCain has improved his cash flow.
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McCain's overall advertising budget for August is expected to exceed $20 million, and, by the convention in early September, Davis said McCain is on track to spend some $60 million on TV expenditures.
He released a new TV ad on Friday in key states that criticizes Obama on taxes.
"Celebrity? Yes. Ready to lead? No," the ad says, with the Democrats' name chanted in the background and pictures of him before adoring crowds. The commercial claims that "Obama's new taxes could break your family budget," mean "higher prices at the pump," and are a "recipe for economic disaster."
Obama spokesman Hari Sevugan responded: "This ad is just more of the same old, false and discredited attacks that Senator McCain knows aren't true."
For the general election, McCain and Obama are operating under different financial scenarios of their own choosing.
McCain has agreed to accept $84 million in public financing for the general election and the spending restraints that come with it.
Though the Republican committee can raise and spend as much as it wants to help McCain, the taxpayer money is the only cash that McCain can spend after accepting his party's nomination at the convention next month. He essentially needs to drain down his privately funded campaign bank account this month — and that helps explain the heavy TV spending.
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Obama, emboldened by record-shattering collections in the primary, decided to forgo public financing for the general election and became the first major-party presidential candidate in three decades to do so. That means he needs to rely on his significant fundraising capabilities to build up his cash reserves going into the fall, whereas McCain needs to deplete his.
McCain's last month total exceeded his $21 million June collection, at that point his best fundraising month; Obama raised more than twice that at $52 million.
Not counting July, Obama overall has raised about $340 million to McCain's nearly $140 million.
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