This article has been updated.
Hillary Clinton’s campaign is looking to turn Jeb Bush’s money into her own.
The Republican presidential candidate’s super PAC announced Thursday a record-shattering $103 million fundraising haul, an astonishing number even in the post-Citizens United era. That’s almost quadruple the amount of money every super PAC had raised by this point in the 2012 election cycle combined, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, and more than the pro-Obama super PAC Priorities USA, which is now backing Clinton, raised in two years during the last presidential election.
Hillary Clinton’s campaign is sounding the alarm, even as allies see a potential silver lining in Bush’s haul.
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On Friday, Clinton finance director Dennis Cheng sent an email to supporters pleading for contributions with the subject line: “Hillary needs you.” In the email, Cheng said he had “bad news” and noted that Bush’s campaign and super PAC had raised a combined $114 million. “If that number scares you, good. It should,” Cheng warned.
“[T]here’s a point at which it may be too much — when we can’t make up for it by organizing better and spending our resources more wisely,” Cheng continued. “We cannot hit that point, especially this early in the campaign.”
The Clinton campaign is hardly broke. Last week, her campaign announced that it had raised $45 million since it launched — the most any primary candidate had raised in history. Priorities USA, that super PAC supporting Clinton, announced that it raised $15.6 millions so far this year, almost all of it coming in the previous four weeks.
Clinton has been on a break-neck fundraising spree since announcing her campaign in April, hopscotching across the country to attend dozens of $2,700 per head fundraises. Aware of Team Bush’s goal of raising more than $100 million, Clinton’s campaign pushed back her big kick-off rally in part to give her more time to fundraise. Donors reported intense pressure to get checks in early, and Clinton has gone hardly more than a few days between fundraisers.
RELATED: Jeb Bush: The $100 million man
Bush’s haul is daunting, but not surprising since his team telegraphed their goal, and Clinton allies are making the best of it.
“Jeb’s haul is eye-popping, jaw-dropping, pants-pooping news,” said Paul Begala, the longtime Clinton aide who now works with Priorities USA. “But does it change our strategy? Not really. We always knew we’d be outspent, as we were last cycle.”
In 2012, Mitt Romney’s super PAC spent millions more than Priorities USA, then supporting Obama, but the Democratic group kept a tight focus and pounded Romney with devastating ads on his record at Bain capital that proved effective.
And there are also downsides for Bush in raising most of his money via super a PAC instead of his campaign. Super PACs are legally prohibited from coordinating with campaigns, so the candidate has little say in how the money is spent or what the super PAC does. For instance, Democratic presidential candidate Martin O’Malley was recently forced to publicly denounce an ad made by the super PAC supporting him attacking Bernie Sanders on gun control.








