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Dems crush GOP in money game
Politico ^ | Jul 24, 2007 | Jeanne Cummings

Posted on 07/24/2007 7:56:03 AM PDT by Anti-Bubba182

From almost any angle, Republicans are facing a Democratic financial tsunami in 2008.
 
In the first six months of this year, Democratic federal candidates and the party's three national committees raised $381 million compared with the $291 million their counterparts collected. That amounts to a $90 million advantage and means that 57 percent of the total raised by all political candidates and committees has gone to the Democrats. 

And that's the good news for Republicans. 

When the cash on hand is added up for presidential, House and Senate candidates, as well as the party committees, the picture is even bleaker. Overall, Democrats reported having $314 million in cash compared with the Republicans' $190 million, which means that 62 percent of the political cash is now held in Democratic accounts. 

What does that mean at political micro-levels? The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee has a 10-1 cash advantage over its Republican adversary, and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has a cash advantage that is three times greater than the National Republican Senatorial Committee's take. 

In the presidential field, the Democrats' two top candidates -- Sens. Barack Obama (Ill.) and Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.) -- each have nearly as much money in the bank as the combined savings of the entire 2008 Republican field. The 10 Republicans running for president reported a combined total of $36 million cash on hand; Obama has $35 million and Clinton has $33 million available for the primary race. 

"I cannot remember a time when the Democrats have had an advantage in the party committees and at the candidate level at the same time," said Michael J. Malbin, executive director of the nonpartisan Campaign Finance Institute. 

Certainly, money alone doesn't win elections. Campaign trails leading to the Oval Office and to the lowly House echo with the tales of well-funded campaigns that met early ends. Among the most notable: Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean's 2004 presidential primary bid.
But money does create options, and at this pace, the Democrats see theirs growing, while the Republicans may well be losing some. 


Take a look at the House. In January, newly selected DCCC Chairman Chris Van Hollen (Md.) laid out a plan to defend his vulnerable freshmen while simultaneously attacking Republicans who eked through last November. "If we continue the current pace, we will have the resources to fully support that strategy," he said. Meanwhile, Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), who heads the National Republican Congressional Committee, started the year with quite a different set of priorities: Pay off the committee's debt and then start tucking money away for the campaign season. 

Cole has made good on his promise. The committee has raised $29 million and spent $27 million. Today, it has got $2 million in the bank and $4 million in debts outstanding, according to its reports. Cole seems on track to move the committee's balance from red to black by year's end. 

But that's when the hard slog begins, because the Democrats' edge isn't just the byproduct of high energy within their ranks. The long-feared Republican fundraising machine also appears to be in decline. While the Republican National Committee has maintained its dominance over the Democratic National Committee, raising $45 million to the DNC's $27 million, even that edge is on the lower end of historic patterns. 

And consider this: When President Bush was running for reelection in 2004, his appearance at the RNC's annual spring gala raised $38.5 million. During last year's congressional campaign season, the presidential gala raised $17 million. This year, it raised $10.5 million.

In addition, the loss of control of Congress has stripped Republicans of one of their most lucrative fundraising assets: committee chairmanships. According to a Center for Inquiry study released last week, corporate donors have made a seismic shift since January toward the new Democratic chairmen. In the first six months of this year, political action committees donated $41 million to Democrats, compared with $24 million for Republicans. During the previous year, Republicans received $32 million in PAC contributions, compared with $22 million for the Democrats, the report concluded.

The presidential campaign season also looms as an obstacle to congressional fundraising. In private conversations, Republican fundraising experts dismiss the yawning gap between their primary field and the Democrats' roster. "When the nominee becomes clear, he will have all the resources he needs," said one longtime Republican operative.

History supports that notion. After scraping through hard times in the 2003 Democratic primary, Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.) found himself flush with cash -- even matching the Bush-Cheney machine -- when he swept the Iowa and New Hampshire primaries.

But that gush of money does not automatically extend to the congressional committees. Van Hollen said he spends plenty of time these days warning donors: "Do not take the House for granted. Things can change quickly."

Even if the money rolls in, managing it frugally can be crucial. In the 2006 cycle, the Republican House committee raised more than the Democrats. What both sides said helped tip the scales in many races was that the Democrats outspent the Republicans in the final weeks of that contentious campaign cycle.
How did they manage that? They had more cash in the bank. 



TOPICS: News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 110th; corruption; democrats; elections; fundingtheleft; gop; specialinterests
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To: Owen
“I will give to individual candidates that I support, not the RNC that supports amnesty”.

Well, it is killed. There is nothing remaining on the table for the RNC to support.

But who is now going to ante up?

Bush still has a lot of work to do to re-earn the lost trust. If Bush and the Republicans want to revive the donors they just disparagingly called vigilantes, bigots, nativists, wanting to execute 20 million people...

An apology from Bush and Co is in order and it might go far to healing the wounds.

Bush stupidly continues to ignore the illegal immigration problem. After the biggest fight of his administration, a fight against his own Republican voter base, he needs to hold a press conference telling America what he's going to do.

Last week Michael Chertoff stated it would be 2013 before America had operational control of our borders, is that Bush's true plan, leave it to the next President to fix? If so, that's unacceptable plain and simple.

Bush needs to show the country that he now understands the problem and is serious about fixing it, perhaps calling up the National Guard and stationing 6 ~ 8 soldiers per mile with rules on engagement that meet force with force, no more rules of engagement forcing our guys to run away.

81 posted on 07/24/2007 10:39:54 AM PDT by RJL
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To: RJL
Exactly. If I was in charge I'd have a press conference stating that the borders would be sealed up by the end of the week; that we'd cut funding from social services for the illegals and use that money for personnel and equipment to ensure that nobody sneaks in, starting Monday. (I know, amateurs talk tactics, experts talk logistics - but I think it could be done if someone had a backbone.)

OK, next issue -

82 posted on 07/24/2007 10:48:58 AM PDT by mallardx
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To: italianquaker

As a life long Repub, who has supported the GOP in the past, I have no plans to give the GOP a dime for ‘08.

For a variety of reasons which can be summed up as disgust with lack to GOP spine.

Also, Bush pissing on his base at key intervals re. amnesty etc has been less than motivating.

So, yes, the lack of GOP money is no surprise. Seems I’m not alone.


83 posted on 07/24/2007 1:18:04 PM PDT by OldArmy52 (Bush's Legacy: 100 million new Dem voters in next 20 yrs via the 2007 Amnesty Act.)
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To: traditional1

No, the Dems are the party of the rich, elite (who buy their way to power via bread & circuses).


84 posted on 07/24/2007 1:24:48 PM PDT by OldArmy52 (Bush's Legacy: 100 million new Dem voters in next 20 yrs via the 2007 Amnesty Act.)
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To: OKIEDOC

Right, Bush in bed with Kennedy on key issues is hurting the GOP at all levels.

A GOP President is implicit GOP leader.

Bush is not liberal enough to attract Dem voters.

And he is pissing off the conservative base.

Who does that leave to vote GOP? The undecided who do “eenie meenie minee moe” in ballot decisions?


85 posted on 07/24/2007 1:31:55 PM PDT by OldArmy52 (Bush's Legacy: 100 million new Dem voters in next 20 yrs via the 2007 Amnesty Act.)
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To: OldArmy52
I have never understood why Bush never responds to his critics?

Can anyone tell me why a grown man would call a senator his friend and then have that so called friend call him something worse than a low life dog?

86 posted on 07/24/2007 5:02:04 PM PDT by OKIEDOC (Kalifornia, a red state wannabe. I don't take Ex Lax I just read the New York Times.)
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To: Owen
Well, it is killed.

No it isn't. Blackbird.

87 posted on 07/24/2007 6:16:55 PM PDT by BlackbirdSST (I'm dug in, giving no more ground to the rino stampede. BB)
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Don’t worry, the democrats can’t sell out fast enough and the American people know that. They can take all the money from the communists, the chinese, the homosexuals, the islamofascists, the hippies and Michael Moore but they can’t take our freedom away. We shall fight them in the hills, in the land and in the sea, we shall fight them in the fields and in congress.

2008 will be our finest hour.


88 posted on 07/25/2007 10:31:37 PM PDT by jootz
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To: OKIEDOC; Anti-Bubba182
Not good! One GOP strength was the ability to raise money. Bush made too many enemies. It is taking the party down.

Enemies, SHAMNESTY.....KILLED THE GOLDEN GOOSE.

In a nutshell, your both right.

89 posted on 07/25/2007 10:36:31 PM PDT by dragnet2
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To: econjack
I can only speculate what would happen with The Beast in the Oval Office.

I agree with your Conserative Islam vs. Female Leader assessment and what is really scary is we will probably get to find out what they will do!!!!

90 posted on 07/26/2007 8:47:38 AM PDT by LM_Guy
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To: dragnet2
Shamnesty killed the Golden Goose makes a good tag line.

Now that our predictions have come true it shows that the CONSERVATIVE blogers have more common sense than do our leaders.

91 posted on 07/26/2007 11:16:16 AM PDT by OKIEDOC (Kalifornia, a red state wannabe. I don't take Ex Lax I just read the New York Times.)
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