The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Biden raises over $360 million in August, shattering record

- By Brian Slodysko

WASHINGTON » Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden raised $364 million in August, a record sum that will give him ample resources to compete in the final two months of the campaign against President Donald Trump.

Biden struggled to raise money early in the primary. But since he became the presumptiv­e nominee in the spring, money has poured into his campaign. In July, he all but closed the huge cash-on-hand advantage enjoyed by Trump, who held $300 million in reserve.

Biden’s August total, which was announced on Wednesday, speaks to the enthusiasm among Democrats to oust Trump from office.

The flood of new contributi­ons came from grassroots supporters, as well as deeppocket­ed donors, and should alleviate any lingering concern over whether Democrats will be able to inundate the airwaves in key states.

“These numbers humble me,” Biden wrote in a message to supporters. “Even in a global recession, working families set aside some money to power this campaign, and a little bit added up in a big way.”

On Monday, the campaign announced it would spend $45 million on a broadcast and digital campaign this week. The 60-second spot features an excerpt from Biden’s Monday speech in Pittsburgh when he pushed back on Trump’s efforts to portray him as a supporter of the violence and unrest that has erupted in cities such as Portland, Ore., and Kenosha, Wis.

“What I’m having to spend a lot of it on is to counter the lies,” Biden told reporters following a speech in Wilmington, Del., referring to inaccurate statements from Trump and his allies, as well as recent ads by a political action committee called Preserve America.

Preserve America, which recently launched an over $20 million ad campaign attacking Biden, is overseen by a GOP strategist who led Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. That organizati­on helped tank Democrat John Kerry’s 2004 presidenti­al run with misleading ads that questioned his record in the Vietnam War.

The ads they have begun airing against in battlegrou­nd states against Biden feature the widow of a slain police officer who questions whether Biden supports law enforcemen­t and inaccurate­ly suggest he condones “rioting and looting.” Biden has repeatedly spoken out against the unrest.

Trump has yet to release his fundraisin­g figures for August. But his campaign recently acknowledg­ed it was conserving money for after Labor Day. Though Trump plans to spend $200 million on advertisin­g before the election, the campaign recently went mostly dark on the airwaves.

Trump’s campaign placed an additional $6 million in advertisin­g this week, though he was still getting outspent by Biden by nearly double, according to advertisin­g data, and that was before Biden announced his new $45 million advertisin­g plan.

Democratic officials attribute the amount raised in August to antipathy toward Trump, the selection of California Sen. Kamala Harris as Biden’s vice presidenti­al nominee and the convention that showcased Biden’s empathy.

“Donald Trump is the greatest fundraisin­g tool in the history of politics,” said finance Chair Chris Korge of the Democratic National Committee.

The money was raised in conjunctio­n with the DNC. Though candidates face a $2,800 limit per individual per election, Biden can raise far more than that through a joint fundraisin­g committee with the DNC that allows him to collect individual checks worth upward of $700,000.

The money is split among his campaign, the DNC and state parties.

The money also gives outside groups supporting Biden’s campaign additional leeway to their use dollars for other efforts that could give Democrats an edge in what is expected to be a tight election, instead of just giving Biden advertisin­g air cover.

Both parties and their allies are litigating dozens of court cases that pertain to election procedures, often over whether hurdles to mail voting should be upheld or eliminated.

The court cases come as Trump has tried to sow doubt about mail voting, arguing it will lead to widespread voter fraud. In fact, fraud has been exceedingl­y rare in the five states that previously switched to mail voting.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden, with wife Jill Biden, saw $364 million added to his campaign coffers in August.
CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Democratic presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Joe Biden, with wife Jill Biden, saw $364 million added to his campaign coffers in August.

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