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With Days To Go, Clinton Leads In Campaign Cash

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Hillary Clinton enters the homestretch of the presidential race with a sizable fundraising lead over Republican rival Donald Trump. Many GOP donors appear to have shifted their giving to down-ballot candidates for House and Senate. And Trump himself has contributed just over half the $100 million he pledged to help bankroll his own campaign.

Finance reports filed Thursday show Clinton's campaign raised nearly twice as much money as Trump's in the first 19 days of October and had nearly four times as much cash on hand.

Trump himself contributed just $31,000 during the period in the form of rent and other in-kind contributions. That's well below the $2 million he'd given in previous months. While Trump has repeatedly told supporters he's willing to pump $100 million into the campaign, his contributions so far total just over $56 million.


CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTIONS, OCT. 1-19

TRUMP: $28.9 million

CLINTON : $57.2 million

JOINT FUNDRAISING W/ NATIONAL PARTY

TRUMP: $61 million

CLINTON: $101 million

CASH ON HAND, OCT. 19

TRUMP: $16 million

CLINTON: $62 million


Trump staffers downplayed their fundraising disadvantage in a conference call with reporters, saying the campaign is using the money it does have very efficiently. The campaign is also relying heavily on the Republican National Committee for get-out-the-vote efforts.

Republican donors are still opening their checkbooks for House and Senate candidates, even as they give less to the man at the top of the ticket. The Senate Leadership Fund, which works to elect GOP senators, announced Thursday that it raised $25 million in the last week.

On the Democratic side, Senate Majority PAC is also seeing a strong flow of donations this month: $19.3 million through October 19.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Scott Horsley is NPR's Chief Economics Correspondent. He reports on ups and downs in the national economy as well as fault lines between booming and busting communities.