Sen. Ted Cruz raised $10 million in his first full-quarter fundraising period as a presidential candidate, his campaign said on Monday.
Cruz has “one of the strongest war chests among those running for president,” the release said, boasting a $51 million fundraising total since March that includes campaign and super PAC fundraising hauls. The statement did not mention the fact that PACs and campaigns are legally forbidden from working together and accordingly have separate war chests.
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Cruz’s $51 million fundraising total includes $4.3 million from first-quarter fundraising, $10 million in second-quarter funds they’re announcing this week, and the $37 million raised by pro-Cruz PACs.
Since announcing his candidacy, Cruz has raked in 175,000 contributions with an average donation of $81, the campaign said in the release. Until the campaigns and PAC file with the Federal Election Commission, these numbers cannot be independently verified. By releasing them, the campaign may be attempting to show that there’s money behind their grassroots support. It also give them the chance to capture the news cycle before the rest of the candidates — including Jeb Bush, long seen as the fundraising champion of the 2016 Republican field — announce their totals.









