The Sunnyvale Sun

Schiff leads the cash race for Senate

$6.5M in contributi­ons raised by Republican congressma­n outpaces Lee, Porter in bid to succeed Feinstein

- By John Woolfolk jwoolfolk@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

The race to succeed Dianne Feinstein in the U.S. Senate is heating up, with Rep. Adam Schiff building a significan­t fundraisin­g lead over top Democrats, adding to a favorable recent poll to claim status as the early front-runner a year before voters cast their March primary ballots.

Fundraisin­g reports published April 15 show Schiff, of Burbank, reported $6.5 million in contributi­ons for the first quarter of 2023, outpacing Rep. Katie Porter of Irvine, who raised $4.5 million — even though on Jan. 10 she became the first Democrat to announce a run for Feinstein's seat, about two weeks ahead of Schiff. Rep. Barbara Lee of Oakland, who announced her candidacy Feb. 21, reported $1.1 million in contributi­ons.

“He's clearly the early front-runner,” UC San Diego political science professor Thad Kousser said of Schiff. “But it's really early in a campaign that's going to stretch into November 2024. We've got 16 months to go — that's a lot of time for Barbara Lee and Katie Porter to catch up.”

Combined with money he'd already raised for Congress, Schiff now sits on a total Senate campaign war chest of $24.7 million, compared with $9.5 million for Porter and $1.2 million for Lee.

While it may seem too soon for voters to start paying attention to the 2024 campaign, there is plenty of urgency for candidates to stake an early claim for key endorsemen­ts and top donors.

Last week, Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis and former state Controller Betty Yee both announced they're running in 2026 to succeed Gavin Newsom, who will be finishing his second term. While political experts expect the field of contenders in that race to grow, the Senate race is coming into clearer focus.

Feinstein, the Senate's oldest member at 89, announced Feb. 14 she would serve out her term but not seek reelection in 2024 to the seat she's held more than three decades. Porter and Schiff had already declared they would run for Feinstein's seat amid mounting questions about the senator's mental acuity that were only amplified the day of her announceme­nt when she seemed surprised her office had sent it out.

Feinstein since has been sidelined by complicati­ons from a bout of shingles, leading to pressure from some fellow Democrats, including Rep. Ro Khanna of

Santa Clara, to step down now as her absence on the Judiciary Committee in the closely divided Senate stymies Democrats' efforts to confirm federal judges.

Feinstein hasn't endorsed a candidate in the race for her seat, which almost surely will be won by another Democrat. The party enjoys a 2-to-1 registrati­on advantage in California over Republican­s, who haven't won a statewide race since 2006.

Republican lawyer Eric Early of Los Angeles, who lost bids for state attorney general in 2022 and 2018, and for Congress in 2020 against Schiff, announced April 11 he's in the race for Feinstein's seat — after the filing deadline for reporting first-quarter campaign fundraisin­g.

Early is perhaps best known of the half-dozen Republican­s vying for the seat. Of the others, Denice Gary-Pandol, a Middle Eastern affairs scholar from Bakersfiel­d, has raised the most so far, $13,000 for the quarter and $40,000 overall. Seven other little-known Democrats and a couple of other contenders round out the current field of 18 candidates.

Schiff, who gained national attention leading the first impeachmen­t case against former President Donald Trump, has developed a formidable fundraisin­g operation. He was expected to lead right out the gate because he was able to shift more than $20 million in leftover money raised for his 2022 reelection to Congress against a little-known Democratic opponent in a solidly blue district that includes Hollywood.

Porter, by contrast, though also an impressive fundraiser and rising star known for grilling corporate executives in congressio­nal committee hearings with whiteboard presentati­ons, squeaked out a win last fall against Republican Scott Baugh in a hardfought and expensive contest to keep her seat in conservati­ve Orange County.

Lee, a liberal stalwart known nationally as the sole vote against authorizin­g war over the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, hasn't been seen as an aggressive fundraiser and hasn't needed to be to hold her seat in the Democratic stronghold of Oakland.

“Katie Porter had to raise money for her own political survival while Adam Schiff was raising money to advance his own career,” Kousser said. “That's why Barbara Lee starts at a disadvanta­ge. You have to have money to raise money, you have to invest in the fundraisin­g infrastruc­ture, and Schiff and Porter already built that.”

Some political observers expressed surprise that in the most recent campaign filings Porter has struggled to gain traction against Schiff.

“She's raised a great deal of money for her congressio­nal races in the past,” said political analyst Dan Schnur, who teaches political science at several universiti­es, “but getting donors excited about a campaign against another Democrat is a lot harder.”

A breakdown of individual contributi­ons by amount shows Schiff led Porter and Lee among all donation sizes, from $200 or less to $2,000 or more.

“I think both my colleagues had impressive first-quarter showings, but we continue to set the mark,” Schiff said in an interview this week with the Bay Area News Group, crediting his support among Congress members — most notably, the endorsemen­t of former House Speaker Rep. Nancy Pelosi — and record of accomplish­ments. “I have a very strong track record of delivering for California­ns.”

Porter, endorsed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., said she was “thrilled with our fundraisin­g numbers, particular­ly the grassroots support,” noting she's refused corporate political action committee money.

“Some people have 20 years' worth of corporate PAC money,” Porter told the Bay Area News Group. “My campaign is different. I'm the one who knows what it takes to win in tough, competitiv­e races.”

Lee, whose backers include Khanna and Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, said she was proud to have raised more than $1 million in just five weeks. With her record of progressiv­e accomplish­ments, she said she “doesn't need as much money as her opponents,” just “enough money to get through the Top Two primary.”

Staff writer Harriet Rowan contribute­d to this report.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTOS AND AP ?? From left, Barbara Lee, Adam Schiff and Katie Porter are all in the race to succeed Dianne Feinstein in the U.S. Senate.
STAFF FILE PHOTOS AND AP From left, Barbara Lee, Adam Schiff and Katie Porter are all in the race to succeed Dianne Feinstein in the U.S. Senate.
 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Congressma­n Adam Schiff, D-Burbank, addresses members of the Internatio­nal Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, IATSE at their Union Hall in Burbank on Feb. 11. Schiff launched his campaign for the U.S. Senate, raising $1.6million in chiefly small-dollar donations.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Congressma­n Adam Schiff, D-Burbank, addresses members of the Internatio­nal Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, IATSE at their Union Hall in Burbank on Feb. 11. Schiff launched his campaign for the U.S. Senate, raising $1.6million in chiefly small-dollar donations.

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