Bernie Sanders & Hillary Clinton, the two top fundraisers in the third quarter
Every three months, all candidates for federal office—president, Senate, House—have to file fundraising reports with the Federal Elections Commission. The reporting deadline for the third quarter of the year, covering the months of July, August, and September, was Thursday night at midnight ET, giving us our first good look at the entire presidential field for both parties. (Some candidates didn't enter the race until the third quarter, so this is the first time they've filed a report.) With help from
ProPublica's FEC Itemizer, we've compiled all the numbers into the sortable chart below the fold.
The headline, though, really says it all: The two leading Democrats, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders, swamped the opposition, taking in $29.9 and $26.2 million respectively. Clinton also spent much more than anyone else, Sanders included, in part because she has a much bigger paid staff than her top rival. As a result, the amount of cash both candidates have in the bank isn't that far apart: $33 million for Clinton, $27 million for Sanders.
The GOP field, meanwhile, is far behind. Ben Carson led the way, but his $20.8 million haul is much hollower than it looks, since he spent an extraordinary $11 million on fundraising—trying to spend money, in other words, to make money. That's translates to an incredibly high expense ratio of more than 50 percent; a more typical rate is around 15 percent.
As for Jeb Bush—the son and brother of presidents, the great establishment hope, the man with access to all the money—he got doubled up by the democratic socialist from Vermont. Head below the fold for the full roundup.
Note: Click column headers to sort.
Candidate |
Party |
Raised |
Spent |
Cash-on-Hand |
Hillary Clinton |
(D) |
$29,921,700 |
$25,776,600 |
$32,995,200 |
Bernie Sanders |
(D) |
$26,216,400 |
$11,258,400 |
$27,119,700 |
Ben Carson |
(R) |
$20,767,267 |
$14,240,045 |
$11,272,534 |
Jeb Bush |
(R) |
$13,384,800 |
$11,465,500 |
$10,271,100 |
Ted Cruz |
(R) |
$12,218,138 |
$6,966,830 |
$13,778,904 |
Scott Walker † |
(R) |
$7,379,170 |
$6,393,960 |
$985,213 |
Carly Fiorina |
(R) |
$6,791,310 |
$2,232,770 |
$5,549,190 |
Marco Rubio |
(R) |
$5,724,780 |
$4,607,860 |
$10,976,000 |
John Kasich |
(R) |
$4,376,790 |
$1,734,840 |
$2,641,950 |
Chris Christie |
(R) |
$4,208,980 |
$2,822,540 |
$1,386,450 |
Donald Trump |
(R) |
$3,926,510 |
$4,159,480 |
$254,773 |
Rand Paul |
(R) |
$2,509,250 |
$4,546,610 |
$2,124,160 |
Martin O'Malley |
(D) |
$1,282,820 |
$1,790,970 |
$805,987 |
Mike Huckabee |
(R) |
$1,241,740 |
$1,365,800 |
$761,411 |
Lindsey Graham |
(R) |
$1,052,660 |
$1,984,170 |
$1,651,310 |
Larry Lessig |
(D) |
$1,016,190 |
$442,254 |
$573,936 |
Jim Webb |
(D) |
$696,972 |
$380,207 |
$316,765 |
Bobby Jindal |
(R) |
$579,438 |
$832,214 |
$260,939 |
Rick Santorum |
(R) |
$387,985 |
$393,478 |
$226,526 |
Rick Perry † |
(R) |
$287,199 |
$1,126,560 |
$44,554 |
George Pataki |
(R) |
$153,514 |
$347,564 |
$13,571 |
Jim Gilmore |
(R) |
$105,807 |
$71,423 |
$34,384 |
Lincoln Chafee |
(D) |
$15,458 |
$59,917 |
$284,526 |
† Withdrew from race.