President Obama and Republican
challenger Mitt Romney each held unique financial advantages headed into the
final 19 days of the race after raising money at a furious pace during the
first half of October.
Romney's campaign and affiliated party committees
raised $111.8 million between Oct 1. and 17, while Obama's reelection committee
and party allies pulled in $90.5 million, according to campaign finance reports
filed Thursday with the Federal Election Commission. The reports are the last
required before election day.
Despite Romney's cash advantage, Obama raised more
directly into his campaign committee, pulling in $54.4 million to Romney's $38
million.
That gives the president more flexibility in how he
can use his financial resources in the final stretch. As of Oct. 17, Obama had
$93.6 million in the bank, while his GOP rival had $52.7 million.
Overall, however, Romney and his party allies had
more on hand: $169 million, compared with almost $125 million held by the
president and affiliated Democratic committees.
In the end, it is likely that both candidates will
exceed $1 billion in money raised, breaking previous records. Since the
beginning of the 2012 cycle, Obama's campaign and affiliated committees have
already pulled in a record $1.037 billion, according to FEC data and the
nonpartisan Campaign Finance Institute. That surpasses the $937 million he
raised for his 2008 White House bid through his campaign, the Democratic
National Committee and three joint fundraising committees.
Romney is also on track to break the billion-dollar
mark, with a total haul of $950.7 million now, some which has gone to the
party's congressional committees.
During the first 17 days of October, Romney burned
through $62 million and Obama spent $82.9 million.
The spending is only going to intensify.
In a recent gathering of top donors in New York,
Romney campaign officials detailed their strategy for the final weeks; at that
point they planned to pump as much as $100 million into television and online
ads between Oct. 18 and election day. That massive bombardment would mean a
substantially expanded on-air presence for the campaign.
The Republican National Committee, which entered
the final 19-day period with $67.6 million on hand, plans to devote more money
than planned to advertising, Chairman Reince Priebus said Thursday.
Both candidates will be backed by outside groups,
but GOP-allied "super PACs" had a significant cash advantage over
their Democratic counterparts for the final leg of the race.
Priorities USA Action, the super PAC backing Obama,
raised $13 million during the first half of October. More than half of its haul
came from just seven donors who gave $1 million each, including financier
George Soros and Mark Pincus, chief executive of online game company Zynga. The
group spent $10.2 million and had $10.1 million in the bank.
Meanwhile, the pro-Romney group Restore Our Future
raised $20 million, with half its take coming from casino magnate and prolific
Republican donor Sheldon Adelson and his wife, Miriam, who each wrote $5
million checks a week apart.
In all, Adelson has suggested he could spend more
than $100 million in the 2012 campaign. Together with his family, he has given
at least $46.5 million in donations to groups that disclose their donations,
according to campaign finance reports.
Restore Our Future also collected $1 million from
each of a quartet of donors: Jerry Perenchio, former chief of Spanish-language
media company Univision; Julian Robertson, a billionaire hedge fund manager;
Dallas-based investor Harold C. Simmons; and Edward St. John, a Baltimore
developer. All except St. John are repeat donors to the group.
The pro-Romney super PAC also benefited from a
rising stock market this year. In June, the committee said it received stock
worth $50,265 from Sean Fieler, a New York financial analyst and chairman of a
group called the American Principles Project, which advocates a return to the
gold standard. When the committee sold the stock last week, it was worth
$67,119.
After spending $12.5 million, almost entirely on
media and direct mail, Restore Our Future entered the final three weeks of the
election with $24 million cash on hand.
American Crossroads, the other major Republican
super PAC, brought in $11.6 million, some from the same donors. Simmons wrote a
$4 million check on Oct. 12, bringing his total to the group to $12.5 million.
Perenchio gave $500,000.
Texas home builder Bob Perry and Robert B. Rowling,
chairman of TRT Holdings, also each added $1 million. Perry has given $5
million to American Crossroads alone; Rowling's checks total $4 million.
After spending $21 million in the first 17 days of
October, the group entered the last leg of the campaign with $6.4 million.
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