Misplaced Pages

Fundraising in the 2016 United States presidential election

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Fundraising in the United States presidential election, 2016)

This article needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (July 2016)

Fundraising plays a central role in many presidential campaigns, and is a key factor (others include endorsements/messaging/visits/staffers) in determining the viability of candidates. Money raised is applied for the salaries of non-volunteers in the campaign, transportation, campaign materials, media advertisements and other contingencies. Under United States law, officially declared candidates are required to file campaign finance details with the Federal Elections Commission (FEC) at the end of every calendar month or quarter. Summaries of these reports are made available to the public shortly thereafter, revealing the relative financial situations of all the campaigns.

However, because of relatively recent changes to campaign finance laws (especially Citizens United v. FEC and McCutcheon v. FEC among others), the fundraising by nominally independent committees will be especially important in 2015 and 2016, perhaps outstripping money raised by the officially declared campaigns. Candidates not currently holding elected office, including Martin O'Malley, Jeb Bush, Scott Walker, and Rick Santorum made their official campaign announcements relatively later than is usual in presidential elections, instead concentrating on their fundraising vehicles, which can collect unlimited sums. By contrast, other candidates including Ted Cruz, Rand Paul, and Marco Rubio were some of the earliest candidates to announce, because as sitting federal Senators they are constrained by campaign-finance limits with regard to nominally independent groups whether or not they are officially declared. All three of these candidates have leadership PACs; many of the nominally independent outside groups are also 501(c)(3) and/or 501(c)(4) organizations, which are legally distinct from 527 organizations (which themselves have many variations). Many campaigns are using at least two or three or four legal entities for fundraising; some campaigns, such as those of Ben Carson, Ted Cruz, and Rick Perry, are utilizing multiple fundraising vehicles of the same (legal) category, to permit donors more fine-grained control over how their money is utilized. Outside spending is expected to play a much larger role in 2016, than it did in 2012, which was the first presidential election after the landmark 2010 decision.

As of July 2015, early fundraising totals for the candidates in the 2016 race have ranged from the millions of dollars to over a hundred million dollars. According to Republican National Committee member Henry Barbour of Mississippi, although some candidates will raise over $50 million during the course of 2015, in order to be competitive candidates will need to raise at least $10 million to $15 million during the course of 2015 (prior to the caucus and primary elections in early 2016). As of July 2015, candidates for the Democratic Party who have already raised at least $10 million include Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders, with Martin O'Malley coming in a distant third with approximately $2 million. Also as of July 2015, candidates for the Republican Party who have already raised at least $10 million include Jeb Bush, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Rick Perry, Rand Paul, John Kasich, Chris Christie, and Ben Carson. Numbers for Scott Walker were not yet disclosed as of mid-July. Coming in 9th place and above (or 8th place and above if Walker is elided) was Bobby Jindal with ~$9m, Mike Huckabee with ~$8m, and Carly Fiorina with ~$5m. Finally, although Donald Trump raised ~$2m dollars from his campaign-announcement in mid-June through the end of the reporting period on June 30, 2015, he has a personal net worth in the billions of dollars, and has stated he will self-finance his campaign.

4th Quarter 2015

Selected campaign-specific finance information through December 31, 2015, according to the FEC.

Republicans 2015q4
Candidate Money Raised Itemized Loans Received Money Spent Cash On Hand Money Transfers
(from other accounts)
Total Debt Refunds
Ben Carson $22,627,101.70 % $ $27,331,988.58 $6,567,647.25 $ $0.00 $
Ted Cruz $20,519,558.79 % $ $15,563,668.37 $18,734,794.46 $ $862,619.59 $
Marco Rubio $14,194,453.68 % $ $14,771,849.55 $10,398,592.91 $ $0.00 $
Donald Trump $13,576,294.86 % $ $6,866,742.86 $6,964,324.88 $ $12,620,297.41 $
Jeb Bush $7,107,370.17 % $ $9,788,641.23 $7,589,858.03 $ $155,989.19 $
John Kasich $3,193,731.54 % $ $3,333,575.92 $2,537,300.60 $ $0.00 $
Chris Christie $2,950,344.25 % $ $3,210,633.55 $1,126,158.09 $ $61,917.77 $
Carly Fiorina $2,853,044.05 % $ $3,917,931.25 $4,484,307.21 $ $0.00 $
Rand Paul $2,077,407.36 % $ $2,931,491.38 $1,270,071.50 $ $248,367.72 $
Lindsey Graham $866,499.29 % $ $1,983,690.88 $534,117.54 $ $0.00 $
Mike Huckabee $703,945.74 % $ $1,332,112.32 $133,244.38 $ $49,471.33 $
Bobby Jindal $284,266.62 % $ $545,205.63 $0.00 $ $0.00 $
Rick Santorum $247,627.45 % $ $431,233.58 $42,919.79 $ $167,401.36 $
George Pataki $102,077.26 % $ $129,111.92 $19,332.33 $ $20,000.00 $
Democrats 2015q4
Candidate Money Raised Itemized Loans Received Money Spent Cash On Hand Money Transfers
(from other accounts)
Total Debt Refunds
Hillary Clinton $38,092,325.12 % $ $33,109,849.90 $37,977,647.61 $ $978,863.24 $
Bernie Sanders $33,559,367.73 % $ $32,374,323.69 $28,304,765.54 $ $0.00 $
Martin O'Malley $1,502,107.92 % $ $2,138,652.30 $169,442.45 $ $535,477.30 $
Jim Webb $68,020.12 % $ $177,943.85 $206,841.61 $ $0.00 $
Key: Withdrew prior to end of quarter

3rd Quarter 2015

Selected campaign-specific finance information through September 30, 2015, according to the FEC.

Republicans 2015q3
Candidate Money Raised Itemized Loans Received Money Spent Cash On Hand Money Transfers
(from other accounts)
Total Debt Refunds
Ben Carson $20,767,266.51 % $ $14,240,044.51 $11,272,534.13 $ $25,000.00 $
Jeb Bush $13,384,832.06 % $ $11,465,513.30 $10,271,129.09 $ $404,737.38 $
Ted Cruz $12,218,137.71 57% $0 $6,966,829.60 $13,778,904.04 $28,495 $0.00 $79,259
Scott Walker $7,376,470.56 % $ $6,393,957.13 $982,513.43 $ $161,133.45 $
Carly Fiorina $6,791,308.76 % $ $2,232,773.15 $5,549,194.41 $ $0.00 $
Marco Rubio $5,724,784.46 78% $1,437 $4,607,861.17 $10,975,988.78 $34,201 $75,902.33 $163,672
John Kasich $4,388,168.30 % $ $1,711,488.32 $2,676,679.98 $ $0.00 $
Chris Christie $4,208,984.49 % $ $2,822,537.10 $1,386,447.39 $ $246,346.89 $
Donald Trump $3,926,511.65 % $ $4,159,474.93 $254,772.88 $ $1,804,747.23 $
Lindsey Graham $2,582,819.11 % $ $1,052,657.62 $1,651,309.13 $ $0.00 $
Rand Paul $2,509,251.63 % $ $4,546,611.25 $2,124,155.52 $ $365,359.11 $
Mike Huckabee $1,241,737.51 % $ $1,365,797.56 $761,410.96 $ $133,104.20 $
Bobby Jindal $579,438.39 % $ $832,214.02 $260,939.01 $ $0.00 $
Rick Santorum $387,985.42 % $ $393,477.76 $226,525.92 $ $67,350.89 $
Rick Perry $287,199.29 % $ $1,126,558.82 $44,553.59 $ $0.00 $
George Pataki $153,513.89 % $ $347,563.59 $13,570.55 $ $20,000.00 $
Democrats 2015q3
Candidate Money Raised Itemized Loans Received Money Spent Cash On Hand Money Transfers
(from other accounts)
Total Debt Refunds
Hillary Clinton $29,921,653.91 % $ $25,776,617.14 $32,995,172.39 $ $647,245.10 $
Bernie Sanders $26,216,430.38 % $ $11,258,446.55 $27,119,721.50 $ $0.00 $
Martin O'Malley $1,282,820.92 % $ $1,790,970.11 $805,986.83 $ $20,607.50 $
Jim Webb $696,972.18 % $ $380,206.84 $316,765.34 $ $0.00 $
Key: Withdrew prior to end of quarter

2nd Quarter 2015

Campaign-specific finance information through June 30, 2015, according to the FEC as of the quarterly filing deadline (July 15, 2015). Information on fundraising via affiliated super PACs is filed semi-annually, with a deadline of July 31, 2015 for the super PAC fundraising of January 1, 2015 through June 30, 2015. As of July 19, affiliated entities of the campaigns for Ben Carson, Martin O'Malley, and Rand Paul are still pending.

Democrats 2015q2
Candidate Money Raised Itemized Loans Received Money Spent Cash On Hand Money Transfers
(from other accounts)
Total Debt Refunds
Hillary Clinton $47,549,949.64 82.7% $0.00 $18,699,814.02 $28,850,135.62 $0.00 $574,147.67 $496,075.76
Bernie Sanders $15,247,353.43 23.9% $0.00 $3,085,615.76 $12,161,737.67 $1,500,000.00 $0.00 $132,668.88
Martin O'Malley $ % $ $ $ $ $ $
Republicans 2015q2
Candidate Money Raised Itemized Loans Received Money Spent Cash On Hand Money Transfers
(from other accounts)
Total Debt Refunds
Ted Cruz $10,043,380.09 60.5% $0.00 $5,450,051.61 $8,527,595.93 $0.00 $618,006.57 $49,486.00
Ben Carson $8,469,048.33 32.8% $0.00 $5,416,772.63 $4,745,312.13 $0.00 $0.00 $11,850.84
Mike Huckabee $2,004,462.73 70.8% $0.00 $1,118,991.72 $885,471.01 $0.00 $11,334.25 $7,150.00
Carly Fiorina $1,704,703.74 57.2% $0.00 $714,044.94 $990,658.80 $0.00 $0.00 $5,575.00
Jeb Bush $ % $ $ $ $ $ $
Bobby Jindal $ % $ $ $ $ $ $
Lindsey Graham $ % $ $ $ $ $ $
Marco Rubio $8,872,907 % $ $3,079,705 $9,859,065 $ $ $
George Pataki $ % $ $ $ $ $ $
Rick Perry $ % $ $ $ $ $ $
Rand Paul $ % $ $ $ $ $ $
Rick Santorum $ % $ $ $ $ $ $

1st Quarter 2015

Campaign-specific finance information through March 30, 2015, according to the FEC as of the quarterly filing deadline (April 15, 2015). Information on fundraising via affiliated super PACs is filed semi-annually, with a deadline of July 31, 2015 for the super PAC fundraising of January 1, 2015 through June 30, 2015.

Democrats 2015q1

None had officially declared, prior to the FEC deadline.

Republicans 2015q1
Candidate Money Raised Itemized Loans Received Money Spent Cash On Hand Money Transfers
(from other accounts)
Total Debt Refunds
Ted Cruz $4,305,780.46 55.5% $0.00 $371,513.01 $3,934,267.45 $250,012.93 $0.00 $0.00
Ben Carson $2,173,193.77 29.3% $25,000 $480,157.34 $1,693,036.43 $0.00 $25,000 $0.00
Key: Withdrew prior to end of quarter
Independents
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (July 2015)

See also

References

  1. Rove, Karl (2014-11-20). "The Early Line on the GOP 2016 Presidential Field". The Wall Street Journal.
  2. Karl Rove. "Articles".
  3. "Candidates & Super PACs: The New Model in 2016 – Brennan Center for Justice".
  4. ^ "Revenge of Citizens United". POLITICO.
  5. ^ "Group files FEC complaints against Bush, other potential candidates". POLITICO.
  6. "5 Years After 'Citizens United,' SuperPACs Continue To Grow". NPR.org. 13 January 2015.
  7. , speaking from 2m15s through 2m55s in the embedded Bloomberg video.
  8. ^ Hohmann, James (2015-07-14). "Huckabee campaign: Huckabee, outside groups have raised $8 million". The Washington Post.
  9. At the time of publication WaPo listed Rand Paul at ~$7m, but noted his affiliated super-PACs had not reported yet; those later reported raising ~$5m which gives Paul a total of $12m through the end of June 2015.
  10. "The 10 best lines from Donald Trump's announcement speech". POLITICO.
  11. "Selected Presidential Reports For The 2015 Year End". Federal Elections Commission. 2016-02-01. Retrieved 2016-02-01.
  12. "Selected Presidential Reports For The 2015 October Quarterly". Federal Elections Commission. 2015-12-18. Archived from the original on 2015-12-19. Retrieved 2015-12-29.
  13. "Selected Presidential Reports For The 2015 June Quarterly". Federal Elections Commission. 2015-07-15. Retrieved 2015-07-19.
  14. "Form 3P for Cruz for President".
  15. "Selected Presidential Reports For The 2015 April Quarterly". Federal Elections Commission. 2015-07-15. Archived from the original on 2015-08-12. Retrieved 2015-07-19.

External links

(← 2012) 2016 United States presidential election (2020 →)
Donald Trump, Mike Pence (R), 304 electoral votes; Hillary Clinton, Tim Kaine (D), 227 electoral votes
Republican Party
AIP · ▌CPNY · ▌RTLP
  • Debates and forums
  • Endorsements
  • Primaries
  • Polls (national · statewide · straw)
  • Results
  • Convention
  • VP candidate selection
  • Candidates
    Nominee
    Donald Trump
    campaign
    endorsements
    positions
    protests
    GOP opposition
    VP nominee: Mike Pence
    Other candidates
    Jeb Bush
    campaign
    positions
    Ben Carson
    campaign
    Chris Christie
    campaign
    Ted Cruz
    campaign
    endorsements
    positions
    Mark Everson
    Carly Fiorina
    campaign
    Jim Gilmore
    campaign
    Lindsey Graham
    campaign
    Mike Huckabee
    campaign
    positions
    Bobby Jindal
    campaign
    John Kasich
    campaign
    endorsements
    Jimmy McMillan
    George Pataki
    campaign
    Rand Paul
    campaign
    positions
    Rick Perry
    campaign
    positions
    Marco Rubio
    campaign
    positions
    Rick Santorum
    campaign
    Scott Walker
    campaign
    Democratic Party
    WEP · ▌WFP
    Candidates
    Nominee
    Hillary Clinton
    campaign
    endorsements
    political
    non-political
    celebrities
    performers
    positions
    Democratic opposition
    VP nominee: Tim Kaine
    Other candidates
    Lincoln Chafee
    campaign
    Rocky De La Fuente
    campaign
    Paul T. Farrell Jr.
    Lawrence Lessig
    campaign
    Martin O'Malley
    campaign
    Bernie Sanders
    campaign
    endorsements
    positions
    Jim Webb
    campaign
    Willie Wilson
    Libertarian Party
    IPNY
    Candidates
    Nominee
    Gary Johnson
    campaign
    endorsements
    positions
    VP nominee: Bill Weld
    Other candidates
    John McAfee
    Austin Petersen
    Green Party
    Candidates
    Nominee
    Jill Stein
    campaign
    endorsements
    VP nominee: Ajamu Baraka
    Other candidates
    Darryl Cherney
    Independents
    IPMN
    Other third-party and independent candidates
    American Delta Party
    Reform
    American Party (South Carolina)
    American Solidarity Party
    America's Party
    Constitution Party
    Nominee
    Darrell Castle
    campaign
    VP nominee: Scott Bradley
    Other candidates
    Tom Hoefling
    Nutrition Party
    Peace and Freedom Party
    PSL
    Prohibition Party
    Socialist Action
    Socialist Equality Party
    Socialist Party USA
    Socialist Workers Party
    Pacifist Party
    Workers World Party
    Other Independent candidates
    * : These candidates were constitutionally ineligible to serve as President or Vice President.
    United States presidential primaries and caucuses
    Election timelines
    National opinion polling
    Democratic Party
    2008
    2016
    2020
    2024
    Republican Party
    2008
    2012
    2016
    2020
    2024
    State opinion polling
    Democratic Party
    2004
    2008
    2016
    2020
    2024
    Republican Party
    2008
    2012
    2016
    2020
    2024
    Fundraising
    Debates and forums
    Democratic Party
    2004
    2008
    2016
    2020
    debates
    forums
    2024
    Republican Party
    2008
    2012
    2016
    2020
    2024
    Libertarian Party
    2016
    Green Party
    2016
    Straw polls
    Major events
    Caucuses
    and primaries
    Democratic Party
    Republican Party
    Libertarian Party
    Green Party
    Reform Party
    Constitution Party
    Results breakdown
    List of candidates by number of primary votes received
    Democratic Party
    2008
    2016
    2020
    2024
    Republican Party
    2008
    2012
    2016
    2020
    2024
    National
    conventions
    Democratic Party
    Republican Party
    Libertarian Party
    Green Party
    Defunct
    Whig Party
    Greenback Party
    Populist Party
    Progressive Party
    Reforms
    Category: