ap

Skip to content
PUBLISHED:
Getting your player ready...

NEW ORLEANS — Battling for every dollar and delegate, Barack Obama raised $7.2 million in Super Tuesday’s wake and Hillary Rodham Clinton pulled in $6.4 million, stunning totals reflecting the intensity of their neck-and-neck race for the Democratic presidential nomination.

Keenly aware of Obama’s growing strength, Clinton challenged him to five debates in the next month. Obama initially put her off, then later agreed to two.

“We’ll have some debates,” Obama promised. But first, he said, “I’ve got to spend time with voters.”

Clinton, he argued, is better-known to voters in states coming up on the primary calendar.

Clinton, who loaned her campaign $5 million in the run-up to Super Tuesday, brushed aside the notion she has money problems. She pointed to the roughly even split of delegates still being allocated from Tuesday’s primaries and caucuses as evidence her campaign has the financial muscle to compete.

“We’re going to be fine,” said Clinton. “By the end of the week, we’ll be back on track,” she told ABC.

Top Clinton advisers offered to work without pay, but that wasn’t necessary with the sudden influx of cash.

National campaign chairman Terry McAuliffe, in a conference call with 300 Clinton fundraisers nationwide, assured them: “All staff 100 percent paid. Not an issue.”

Whatever the current balance in the money chase, both candidates have been raising and spending incredible sums.

Each raised $100 million last year and sped through at least $80 million. That compared with $128 million raised by all the Democratic candidates combined during 2003, the comparable period four years ago. President Bush, running uncontested, pulled in $129 million of his own that year.

Any financial crunch for Clinton would be largely due to lopsided fundraising in January, when Obama pulled in $32 million to her $13.5 million.

“Obama was able to do what no one thought possible, which is to finance Super Tuesday,” said Anthony Corrado, a campaign finance expert at Colby College in Maine. “He was able to advertise in more states, went on TV earlier in more states and put more resources into ground efforts in most of these states.”

Looking ahead, Corrado said, the question for Clinton is whether she will have the cash needed for expensive advertising campaigns in upcoming contests including Ohio, Wisconsin and Texas.

“Obama’s donor base continues to expand, so it’s doubtful that she is going to be able to catch up,” Corrado said, calling Obama an “unexpected financial colossus.”

Clinton has had the advantage of better name recognition, but Obama’s recent financial advantage has helped him overcome that familiarity gap.

Obama, asked about Clinton’s recent personal loan to her campaign, said it showed “she has not generated the kind of grassroots enthusiasm that we have.”

Barack Obama

A 30-second Super Bowl ad: $250,000

Telephone expenses, paid to Verizon on Nov. 29: $70,308.48

Printing costs for the last three months of 2007: $709,579.47

Postage expenses for the last three months of 2007: about $1 million

Website hosting expenses, paid to Blue State Digital LCC on Oct. 3: $71,527.56

Payments to Dunkin’ Donuts during the last three months of 2007: $352.69

Travel and lodging in the last three months of 2007: about $5.7 million

Hillary Rodham Clinton

Ads that began airing Jan. 23 in Arizona, California, Connecticut, Missouri, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Utah: more than $1.6 million

Telephone expenses, paid to Verizon on Nov. 27: $14,279.55

Printing costs for the last three months of 2007: about $1.3 million

Postage expenses for the last three months of 2007: $332,001.22

Office equipment expense, paid to US21 Computers Inc. on Dec. 19: $50,236.12

Event expense at Morton’s steakhouse in Chicago, paid on Oct. 3: $18,551.80

Travel in the last three months of 2007: about $4.1 million

RevContent Feed

More in News