Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Federal Judge Orders Trump Admin to Restore Hundreds of UCLA Research Grants

7 hours ago

Trump Names Rosner as Chair of Energy Regulator

7 hours ago

Wall Street Slips as Hot Producer Inflation Data Dampens Rate-Cut Bets

7 hours ago

Trump Says He Thinks Putin Will Make a Deal

7 hours ago

Fresno Unified Wants Parents to Know About New Resources as School Begins

22 hours ago

Trump Revokes Biden-Era Order on Competition, White House Says

24 hours ago

US Judge Blocks Trump Religious Exemption to Birth Control Coverage

1 day ago

Trump Says He Will Name New Fed Chair ‘a Little Bit Earlier’

1 day ago

US Alcohol Consumption at Record Low as Health Concerns Rise, Survey Finds

1 day ago

Hidden in Trump’s Spending Package Is a Boost to CA’s Affordable Housing

2 days ago
Harris Sets Record for Biggest Fundraising Quarter Ever
d8a347b41db1ddee634e2d67d08798c102ef09ac
By The New York Times
Published 10 months ago on
October 21, 2024

Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential nominee, arrives at a campaign rally at the Lakewood Amphitheater in Atlanta, Oct. 19, 2024. Harris’s campaign set a record for the biggest fund-raising quarter ever this fall, raising $1 billion in the three-month period that ended Sept. 30. (Nicole Craine/The New York Times)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign set a record for the biggest fundraising quarter ever this fall, raising $1 billion in the three-month period that ended Sept. 30.

Harris’ campaign and its allied party committees said they raised $378 million in September alone, compared with the $160 million reported by former President Donald Trump’s campaign and allied groups.

Harris and her groups said they entered October with $348 million on hand; Trump’s aides said his campaign and its affiliated groups had $283 million.

The vast gap between Harris’ and Trump’s committees was laid bare in new filings made with the Federal Election Commission on Sunday evening. The figures show the state of the race as of the end of September, and they capture the fallout of the presidential debate that month, which Harris was widely perceived to have won.

The figures may be new but the story is familiar.

Each month since Harris became the Democratic presidential nominee, she has significantly outraised and outspent Trump, building a vastly bigger campaign than has the Republican nominee.

In September, the margin by which Harris’ principal campaign committee outraised Trump was nearly identical to the margin by which she outspent him — about 3.5 to 1.

Harris’ committee raised about $222 million in September, while Trump’s raised about $63 million. Harris’ committee entered October with about $187 million on hand; Trump’s committee had just about $120 million.

The vast majority of both campaign committees’ spending was on advertising. About $222 million of the $270 million that Harris’ campaign spent in September was on media buys and production costs. Trump spent about $53 million on media costs, a slightly smaller proportion of the $78 million that his campaign spent during that 30-day period.

The previous record for a fundraising quarter across all party committees is believed to have been set by Joe Biden in the third quarter of 2020, when his campaign and allied groups reported about $888 million in total fundraising, based on self-reported totals.

Both Harris and Trump, combined with their party committees, raised less in September 2024 than did the corresponding efforts in 2020. Harris’ $378 million was less than the record-setting $383 million that Biden’s team raised in September 2020. Trump’s $160 million in September 2024 is less than the $248 million he raised in September 2020.

Trump has consistently raised less money than during his last run for president, in part because his low-dollar fundraising apparatus is struggling to keep up with its pace four years ago. Harris, for her part, is doing better at fundraising than did Biden, who for a few months this year was raising less each month than Trump.

To deal with the cash crunch, the Trump campaign has recently been working to cut costs by offloading some traditional campaign expenditures, such as event-production fees and some salary costs, to party-affiliated committees.

The Republican National Committee entered October with $69.7 million on hand. The RNC disclosed spending about $3.5 million on payroll and taxes to about 340 staff members in September.

The Democratic National Committee had $46.6 million on hand, after spending some $102 million during September. The DNC disclosed spending $6 million on payroll and taxes to about 680 people that month, twice as many people..

Campaigns and party committees typically work to spend their cash down to zero, although both campaigns are aware that postelection litigation could require additional funds.

Given her cash advantage, Harris has been able to spend more of her time, a precious resource in these final weeks, campaigning — while Trump has had to spend time raising money in places like Texas and Florida, where he hosted a finance event last Wednesday. Trump has also scheduled a fundraising reception in New York preceding his coming rally at Madison Square Garden.

Harris can also spend more money on voter contact. She and her supporters are scheduled to outspend Trump and his backers on television and radio advertising by about 30% over the final two weeks of the campaign, according to data from AdImpact. (That is actually a smaller gap than the 60% spending advantage that the Democrats enjoyed over the Republicans in the past two weeks.)

Those supporters are primarily Harris’ enormous super political action committees. Harris’ team has labored to keep attention on the Republican billionaires funding Trump’s super PAC, but rarely discuses their own at Future Forward, the main big-money pro-Harris group. A few Democratic billionaires disclosed eight-figure checks to Future Forward in September: Facebook co-founder Dustin Moskovitz and crypto billionaire Chris Larsen gave about $10 million each, and Gov. J.B. Pritzker of Illinois gave $5 million.

Trump’s super PACs disclosed most big supporters earlier last week, but the disclosures Sunday revealed new contributions by one of Trump’s strongest supporters. Timothy Mellon, the reclusive heir to the Gilded Age banking fortune, put $25 million more into a pro-Trump super PAC, MAGA Inc. Mellon has now donated a staggering $150 million this cycle to that group, which entered October with $59 million on hand. Trump’s recently appointed transition co-chair, Linda McMahon, also donated $5 million. The group entered October with $61 million on hand.

Another portrait of presidential fundraising will emerge Thursday, when campaigns and super PACs report money raised and spent through the first half of October.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Theodore Schleifer and Albert Sun/Nicole Craine
c. 2024 The New York Times Company

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Barry Bonds Beats the Babe! Statistical Model Crowns a New ‘Greatest’ in Baseball

DON'T MISS

Californians to Vote on Mid-Decade Redistricting in November, Newsom Says

DON'T MISS

Sanger Police Arrest 1 for DUI, Issue 30 Citations at Wednesday Checkpoint

DON'T MISS

All National Guard Troops Sent to Washington Are Mobilized, Pentagon Says

DON'T MISS

Wall Street Ends Flat, but S&P Hits Another Closing High as Rate-Cut Bets Waver

DON'T MISS

Oil Prices Climb 2% to 1-Week High as Fed Rate Cut, Trump-Putin Talks Loom

DON'T MISS

Tina Is a Lovable, Huggable Bundle of Feline Joy

DON'T MISS

US Senators Call for Meta Probe After Reuters Report on Its AI Policies

DON'T MISS

Trump: Journalists Should Be Allowed Into Gaza

DON'T MISS

California’s Newest Invaders Are Beautiful Swans. Should Hunters Kill Them? 

UP NEXT

Californians to Vote on Mid-Decade Redistricting in November, Newsom Says

UP NEXT

Sanger Police Arrest 1 for DUI, Issue 30 Citations at Wednesday Checkpoint

UP NEXT

All National Guard Troops Sent to Washington Are Mobilized, Pentagon Says

UP NEXT

Wall Street Ends Flat, but S&P Hits Another Closing High as Rate-Cut Bets Waver

UP NEXT

Tina Is a Lovable, Huggable Bundle of Feline Joy

UP NEXT

US Senators Call for Meta Probe After Reuters Report on Its AI Policies

UP NEXT

Trump: Journalists Should Be Allowed Into Gaza

UP NEXT

California’s Newest Invaders Are Beautiful Swans. Should Hunters Kill Them? 

UP NEXT

Outside Lands 2025: Where Music, Love, and Community Collide

UP NEXT

Man Charged With Throwing Sandwich at US Agent Was Justice Dept Staffer

All National Guard Troops Sent to Washington Are Mobilized, Pentagon Says

2 hours ago

Wall Street Ends Flat, but S&P Hits Another Closing High as Rate-Cut Bets Waver

2 hours ago

Oil Prices Climb 2% to 1-Week High as Fed Rate Cut, Trump-Putin Talks Loom

2 hours ago

Tina Is a Lovable, Huggable Bundle of Feline Joy

2 hours ago

US Senators Call for Meta Probe After Reuters Report on Its AI Policies

2 hours ago

Trump: Journalists Should Be Allowed Into Gaza

3 hours ago

California’s Newest Invaders Are Beautiful Swans. Should Hunters Kill Them? 

3 hours ago

Outside Lands 2025: Where Music, Love, and Community Collide

3 hours ago

Man Charged With Throwing Sandwich at US Agent Was Justice Dept Staffer

4 hours ago

Fresno County Fire Burns 31 Acres at Lost Lake Recreation Area

4 hours ago

Barry Bonds Beats the Babe! Statistical Model Crowns a New ‘Greatest’ in Baseball

Every sport has its arguments over which player was the greatest, but no sport takes the debate as seriously as baseball does. It is a game ...

29 minutes ago

29 minutes ago

Barry Bonds Beats the Babe! Statistical Model Crowns a New ‘Greatest’ in Baseball

California Governor Gavin Newsom speaks at a press conference, accompanied by members of the Texas Democratic legislators, at the governor’s mansion in Sacramento, California, U.S., August 8, 2025. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
1 hour ago

Californians to Vote on Mid-Decade Redistricting in November, Newsom Says

sanger police department
1 hour ago

Sanger Police Arrest 1 for DUI, Issue 30 Citations at Wednesday Checkpoint

Members of the National Guard stationed outside Union Station in Washington, on Thursday morning, Aug. 14, 2025. All 800 National Guard troops whom President Trump ordered into the streets of Washington this week to fight crime have mobilized for duty, the Pentagon said on Thursday. (Kent Nishimura/The New York Times)
2 hours ago

All National Guard Troops Sent to Washington Are Mobilized, Pentagon Says

A trader works on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., May 30, 2025. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon/File Photo
2 hours ago

Wall Street Ends Flat, but S&P Hits Another Closing High as Rate-Cut Bets Waver

A pumpjack operates at the Vermilion Energy site in Trigueres, France, June 14, 2024. (Reuters File)
2 hours ago

Oil Prices Climb 2% to 1-Week High as Fed Rate Cut, Trump-Putin Talks Loom

Tina GV Wire's Adoptable Pet of the Week, Aug. 14, 2025
2 hours ago

Tina Is a Lovable, Huggable Bundle of Feline Joy

2 hours ago

US Senators Call for Meta Probe After Reuters Report on Its AI Policies

Search

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Send this to a friend