Bernie Sanders' campaign is a grassroots movement, while most of the
other campaigns are backed by millionaires and billionaires.…
On Friday, campaign super PACs filed financial reports with the Federal Elections Commission (FEC), giving the public a more complete picture of which candidates are doing well and which ones are doing poorly in the fundraising race. The August 1st edition of The New York Times ran a piece showing how much money each candidate has raised, and it also included how much cash has been raised by super PACs supporting each candidate.
Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders has raised 13.7 million dollars
in total contributions, with 80. 7 percent of that money coming from
donations of 200 dollars or less. For comparison, 19 percent of Hillary
Clinton’s donations have been 200 dollars or less. Just 3.3 percent of
Jeb Bush’s contributions have come from small donations.
Only retired neurosurgeon Carson comes close to
matching Sanders in his reliance on small donors to power his campaign.
80.2 percent of Carson’s money has come from donations of 200 dollars or
less.
While those figures are from the actual campaigns
themselves, the race for dollars among super PACs might be even more
revealing. For example, over 95 percent of contributions to super PACs
that support Cruz have come from donations of one
million dollars or more. Over 75 percent of super PAC funds in support
of Huckabee, Perry and Rubio have also come from
contributions of a million dollars or greater.
For Hillary Clinton super PACs, the figure is 51.1
percent. By contrast, no pro-Sanders super PAC has received any
donations exceeding a million dollars.
Thirty-one wealthy donors have given 1.1 million dollars or more to fund presidential candidates
or pro-candidate super PACs. Each of those donors has funneled their
money to Republicans, with Cruz bootlickers Mercer and Neugebauer leading the charge. Each has donated more than ten million to
support Cruz’s pretender bid.
While no individual has given over a million dollars
to back any Democrat running for president, a handful of individuals
have contributed exactly one million to help elect Hillary Clinton. Philanthropist George Soros and film director Steven Spielberg have each contributed a million dollars to help elect Hillary Clinton.
Since
Bernie Sanders is explicitly taking on the “billionaire class”, it
makes sense that his campaign would resonate with ordinary citizens,
while failing to catch hold with the super wealthy. The fundraising
reports released so far bear out what it probably obvious. Bernie
Sanders campaign is a grassroots, people-powered movement, while most of
the other campaigns are being backed by millionaires and billionaires.
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