The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Can Rubio’s campaign keep up with Bush’s behemoth?

- Steve Peoples and Julie Bykowicz

LAS VEGAS — Hundreds of donors to Jeb Bush’s presidenti­al campaign will gather later this month in Houston. They’ll shake hands with a pair of former presidents, and high-profile lieutenant­s of the former Florida governor will push them to write generous checks.

This weekend in Las Vegas, dozens of donors met up with Marco Rubio. They ate fast-food hamburgers, shook hands with a celebrity pawn-shop owner and played flag football with the Florida senator.

“I’d say he threw five intercepti­ons, maybe three or four touchdown passes,” Wayne Berman, Rubio’s national finance chairman, said playfully. “There were a lot of middle aged guys trying to show off.”

There are more than a dozen major candidates in the Republican presidenti­al primary, and while outsiders Donald Trump and Ben Carson top the current preference polls, it’s the two Floridians — Bush and Rubio — at the head of the second wave.

They’re competing for same donors who traditiona­lly support GOP White House candidates, and their October finance summits illustrate how each plans to pay for their presidenti­al ambitions with the hand he was dealt. They are also evidence of how Bush, with four months to go before the lead-off Iowa caucuses, enters the fall with a distinct advantage over his one-time protege.

The son and brother of presidents, Bush came to the race with a sprawling network of experience­d fundraiser­s. He also spent months personally wooing wealthy donors for a super PAC designed to help him win.

Rubio had none of those advantages. He’s the son of working-class immigrants, and as a sitting senator he is legally barred from raising money for a super PAC that backs him. As a result, his campaign and the super PAC collected less than a quarter of the $114 million the Bush team raised in the first six months of the year.

“We have no margin for error in our fundraisin­g,” Berman told The Associated Press as the weekend retreat for roughly 70 top donors was wrapping up inside a hotel on the Las Vegas strip. But, he added, “Our ability to raise money is dramatical­ly improving.” It has to. In modern American politics, money is often the strongest predictor of success. Even though Rubio’s poll numbers are improving, his fundraisin­g is badly lagging several Republican competitor­s. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz doubled Rubio’s take from donors over the last three months, while Carson, the retired neurosurge­on, tripled it.

Money raised for a presidenti­al campaign is usually consumed by one thing above others: television advertisin­g. And in TV dollars Bush’s distinct financial advantage is already starting to play out in the campaign.

Bush and his super PAC, Right to Rise, have begun a planned $50 million television advertisin­g blitz. ProBush commercial­s hit the air several weeks ago and are booked to run continuous­ly in the early voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina through February, according to informatio­n collected by Kantar Media’s CMAG advertisin­g tracker.

Meanwhile, Rubio and the super PAC helping him, Conservati­ve Solutions, have reserved ad space worth about half that amount. They’re putting off expensive broadcast TV commercial­s until the week of Thanksgivi­ng, according to tracking informatio­n updated through Friday.

The campaigns and outside groups can purchase ad space at any time, meaning those plans could change. But the ads only become more expensive, particular­ly for the super PACs. Any investment now pays extra dividends.

Rubio’s team currently cannot afford the TV space it has reserved, so it must raise more money to see them through. Bush’s team, particular­ly his allied super PAC, might not need to bring in another dollar to fund its TV strategy well into next year.

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