Voters are starting their first real peek at who’s winning the 2016 presidential money race, as both Republican and Democratic contenders are reporting their second quarter fundraising hauls to federal regulators. Candidates must file their April-June numbers by July 15, while super PACs supporting those candidates have until July 31 to file reports.
Since all the presidential hopefuls in the race right now declared their candidacy in the second quarter (except for Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, who announced in March) the fundraising numbers during that period are the first real money test of this election cycle. Not only will we find out which candidates are — or aren’t — having fundraising success, we’ll also get a glimpse at which mega donors have contributed to super PACS. Thanks to the Supreme Court’s controversial 2010 Citizens United decision, wealthy individuals and corporations can contribute unlimited funds to super PACs and other independent groups as long as they don’t coordinate directly with the candidates they support.
Some campaigns and super PACS have been spilling the beans ahead of the filing deadline. Here’s what we know so far, and here’s what to look out for as the filing deadlines approach.
RELATED: Cruz campaign highlights super PAC fundraising numbers
WHAT WE KNOW:
Hillary Clinton is a force to be reckoned with: The Democratic frontrunner’s campaign raised more than $45 million in the second quarter of this year, stressing that the vast majority of donations — 90% — were grassroots contributors who gave $100 or less. That puts Clinton on track to bring in approximately what Obama fundraised last election cycle as of June 30, 2011 – $33 million in addition to $12.75 million transferred from previous campaigns.
Priorities USA Action, the super PAC backing Clinton for president, said it would report a $15.6 million haul in Q2. Peter Kauffman, a spokesman for the group, recently told msnbc that several big name donors had contributed, with one longtime Clinton supporter, media mogul Haim Saban, topping the list with a $2 million check. Billionaire financier and philanthropist George Soros, directors Steven Spielberg and J.J. Abrams, and Dreamworks Animation’s Jeffrey Katzenberg have also contributed, Kauffman said.
Ted Cruz is also going strong: The tea party favorite’s early jump into the GOP field is paying off.
Cruz’s campaign announced this week it had raised $10 million in the second quarter – touting the support of 175,000 grassroots contributors and an average donation of $81. That’s on top of $4.3 million Cruz received in the first quarter of the year and $37 million reportedly raised by pro-Cruz super PACs, which must operate independently of a candidate’s official campaign operation.
Here’s some perspective. During this quater in 2011, eventual GOP nominee Mitt Romney brought in $18.3 million.
Carly Fiorina is in trouble: Despite evidence of grassroots interest in Fiorina’s campaign in Iowa and elsewhere, the former Hewlett-Packard CEO is lagging far behind her GOP competitors in fundraising. Her campaign announced this week that it had raised just $1.4 million in Q2, with her super PAC bringing in an additional $3.4 million. Fiorina’s campaign manager noted in a memo that the GOP candidate, who entered the race on May 4, has not been building the political infrastructure that other candidates have spent many years creating.
RELATED: Bernie Sanders brings in $15 million, campaign says









