Dayton Daily News

Biden’s $53 million February fuels advantage over Trump

- ©2024 The New York Times Nicholas Nehamas and Shane Goldmacher

President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign said Sunday that it had raised more than $53 million in February together with the Democratic Party, an influx of cash that is expected to widen the Democrats’ cash advantage in a general-election contest against former President Donald Trump.

Biden, the Democratic Party and their shared accounts now have $155 million cash on hand — up from $130 million at the end of January, his campaign said. The campaign credited strong support from small-dollar donors for its February fundraisin­g.

So far in the race, Biden and the Democrats have built a substantia­l fundraisin­g advantage over Trump and the Republican National Committee, which reported around $40 million in cash on hand between them at the end of January. The Trump campaign has not released its February fundraisin­g figures but has said it also had its strongest month among small donors — topping the $22.3 million raised in August. Trump and the RNC formed a formal joint fundraisin­g account only last week.

“The fact that we have $155 million in cash on hand — which is 100% going to building out the campaign and focused on the six or seven states that are going to determine the outcome of this election — is just a huge competitiv­e advantage,” Jeffrey Katzenberg, a co-chair of the Biden campaign, said in an interview.

Trump has been schmoozing with donors at Mar-aLago, his private club and residence in Palm Beach, Florida, trying to lessen the financial disparity. The former president is also confrontin­g the financial pressure of his legal bills, which are being paid by one of his political action committees.

Both campaigns must disclose details of their finances Wednesday, with a more complete picture due April 15.

In February, Biden’s campaign said it had received contributi­ons from 469,000 donors. More than 178,000 people have committed to making monthly donations — a considerab­le supply of renewable cash. The campaign said it had received especially strong responses to fundraisin­g emails focusing on Trump becoming the likely Republican nominee.

The new numbers cover the combined fundraisin­g of Biden’s campaign, the Democratic National Committee and the Biden Victory Fund, a joint fundraisin­g committee between Biden and the DNC. The campaign did not break down how much each of those entities raised or how much cash they have on hand individual­ly.

The figures do not include the funds that Biden pulled in after his State of the Union address March 7. His campaign said it raised $10 million in the 24 hours after the speech, which served to kickstart Biden’s reelection effort.

Although Biden is outraising Trump in this cycle, the $53 million he raised in February falls far short of the $86 million that Trump collected in February 2020, when he was an incumbent president seeking reelection.

Biden has spent heavily this month as the campaign has ratcheted up in intensity, investing $30 million in a sixweek advertisin­g campaign in key battlegrou­nd states and hiring new staff members. He and Vice President Kamala Harris have also campaigned in several swing states since the State of the Union. Last week, Harris made a high-profile trip to an abortion clinic, becoming the highest-ranking U.S. official known to do so — a visit that underscore­d how reproducti­ve rights have become a driving issue for Democratic voters.

Katzenberg said the campaign’s fundraisin­g had “accelerate­d” as Biden and his surrogates had begun to hit the trail.

“The more people see Joe Biden and his energy and his enthusiasm and his commitment,” Katzenberg said, “it has dispelled what has been, I think, a whole bunch of gossip and really sort of a competitiv­e false narrative of him and his capability today and his mental acuity.”

 ?? STEPHANIE SCARBROUGH / AP ?? President Joe Biden delivers remarks Sunday during a St. Patrick’s Day brunch with Catholic leaders in the East Room of the White House. Biden and the Democratic Party now have $155 million on-hand for his re-election campaign.
STEPHANIE SCARBROUGH / AP President Joe Biden delivers remarks Sunday during a St. Patrick’s Day brunch with Catholic leaders in the East Room of the White House. Biden and the Democratic Party now have $155 million on-hand for his re-election campaign.

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