WASHINGTON (AP) — In its first publicly available financial report since the Super Tuesday primaries, Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign said it raised $12.6 million in contributions last month, a figure that puts Romney at a disadvantage with the man whose job he wants come November.
President Barack Obama countered Romney’s fundraising haul with $53 million in donations between his campaign and the Democratic Party in March. But a fire hose of cash from a major GOP “super” political committee is likely to bring some financial parity to the race, and Romney just recently started collecting funds for the general election.
For the first time since Super Tuesday, voters are getting a look at just how much money presidential candidates and their supporters have been raking in. Friday also marks nearly three months since Obama’s campaign changed course and asked supporters to pony up cash to a favorable super PAC.
Financial reports due Friday to the Federal Election Commission will also show how much red ink struggling campaigns are bleeding — or, in the case of the Republican super PAC American Crossroads, how much money some groups have been stuffing in their war chests.
Crossroads and its nonprofit arm, Crossroads GPS, raised a combined $100 million this election cycle, the group plans to announce Friday. Crossroads, backed by former George W. Bush adviser Karl Rove, has run TV ads critical of Obama and is expected to be a major player on the airwaves during the general election.
Indeed, much has changed since the March 6 Super Tuesday contests, when Republican voters in six out of 10 states chose Mitt Romney as their preferred nominee to compete against Obama. Rick Santorum has since folded his campaign, and Newt Gingrich has been working with a shoestring budget.
The fundraising flurry left Romney’s campaign with about $10 million in the bank at the end of March; Obama had more than $84 million cash on hand by the end of February. At the same time, incumbents like Obama are likely to raise more money because they don’t have costly primaries to face.
Still, Obama’s fundraising advantage puts him at a less-than-solid position when compared with the tens of millions of dollars American Crossroads and its nonprofit arm, Crossroads GPS, have amassed so far. During the last six months of 2011 alone, GPS brought in $28 million from only a few dozen major donors, recent tax filings show. Crossroads has said it plans to raise more than $300 million to beat Obama.
Countering Crossroads’ millions in ad spending is Priorities USA Action, a super PAC founded by former Obama advisers. From early 2011 through the end of February, however, the group and its nonprofit arm raised about $10 million. Priorities USA Action, like other super PACs supporting GOP candidates, has counted on major financial support from a handful of wealthy donors.
Those include very generous donors like Las Vegas casino magnate Sheldon Adelson and his wife, who have given more than $10 million combined to a super PAC supporting Gingrich. It’s unclear, however, if the Winning Our Future PAC will still receive big contributions from Adelson now that Romney is the presumptive nominee.
Obama, for his part, is facing the prospect of being swamped by outside Republican groups in fundraising. That’s why he decided three months ago to reverse course and give his blessing to super PACs, which can accept unlimited donations from corporations, labor unions and wealthy individuals.
Friday’s reports will detail just where the president’s campaign donors’ money came from, and if he’s added to an already-sizeable army of 500 paid staffers that — as of March 1 — was roughly five times the size of Romney’s operation.
Most super PACs and presidential campaigns have until midnight Friday to submit their reports.
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