Santa Fe New Mexican

O’Rourke raises $6.1M in campaign’s first 24 hours

- By Jonathan Martin

WASHINGTON — Beto O’Rourke raised more than $6 million online in the first 24 hours after announcing his presidenti­al campaign last week, according to his campaign, outpacing his rivals for the Democratic nomination and making an emphatic statement about his grassroots financial strength.

O’Rourke brought in $6,136,736 after declaring his long-anticipate­d bid with a web video and trip to Iowa on Thursday morning, raising the sum entirely online and from all 50 states, the campaign said.

He narrowly beat the first-day haul of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., who raised $5.9 million after announcing his bid last month and who would go on to raise $10 million before his first week was over.

O’Rourke’s early burst of fundraisin­g illustrate­s how much he has captured the imaginatio­n of many Democratic activists around the country, who propelled him to break financial records

last year in his ultimately losing bid to unseat Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas. There were some doubts as to whether those same grassroots donors would also contribute to him when he was not facing Cruz — a detested figure on the left — but rather was one more entrant in a sprawling presidenti­al primary.

O’Rourke’s money will, at least for now, quiet some of those skeptics: In a single day online, he raised nearly a quarter of what Barack Obama, then a senator,

did in the entire first quarter of 2007.

Now the question is whether he can sustain that level of support. Sanders raised his first $10 million quickly in February, much of it in small contributi­ons. There is no way to independen­tly confirm either candidate’s initial contributi­ons; O’Rourke, Sanders and the rest of the presidenti­al hopefuls must file fundraisin­g reports at the end of March. Those first-quarter filings will be made public April 15.

 ?? TODD HEISLER/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Beto O’Rourke, center, makes a campaign stop last week at a private home in Muscatine, Iowa. O’Rourke, the 46-yearold former Texas congressma­n whose near-miss Senate run last year propelled him to Democratic stardom, entered the race of the Democratic presidenti­al nomination Thursday.
TODD HEISLER/NEW YORK TIMES Democratic presidenti­al candidate Beto O’Rourke, center, makes a campaign stop last week at a private home in Muscatine, Iowa. O’Rourke, the 46-yearold former Texas congressma­n whose near-miss Senate run last year propelled him to Democratic stardom, entered the race of the Democratic presidenti­al nomination Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States