Donald J. Trump’s presidential marketing campaign took in $14.4 million within the first three months of 2023, a part of an $18.8 million haul throughout his two marketing campaign committees this quarter — a modest sum that captures solely the start of a fund-raising bonanza set off by his indictment in late March.
In the weeks since then, Mr. Trump has raised greater than $15 million, his marketing campaign stated Saturday forward of its quarterly submitting with the Federal Election Committee — together with at the very least $4 million within the 24 hours after The Times reported his indictment on March 30.
A extra thorough accounting of Mr. Trump’s post-indictment fund-raising is not going to be accessible for months, when the subsequent quarterly submitting is due. Still, the newest numbers present that the case towards Mr. Trump gave a jolt of power to his efforts to lift marketing campaign funds, which had been sluggish out of the gate, drawing greater than 300,000 particular person donations, a overwhelming majority of which had been underneath $200, his marketing campaign stated.
Mr. Trump had a head begin in fund-raising towards his present and potential rivals for the Republican nomination, however maybe extra important is the best way his base has rallied across the former president after his indictment, which a lot of his supporters see as politically motivated.
Steve Cheung, a spokesman for the Trump marketing campaign, didn’t reply to a request for remark.
Mr. Trump has raised most of his cash by means of his Save America Joint Fundraising Committee — $14 million of the marketing campaign’s recorded haul within the first quarter was transferred from the committee. The marketing campaign stated the full raised by the 2 committees was $18.8 million.
Mr. Trump’s marketing campaign reported $13.9 million money readily available as of March 31.
The Trump marketing campaign has used his joint fund-raising committee not merely as an umbrella group to disburse funds, but additionally to pay some marketing campaign bills, based on that committee’s most up-to-date filings, in January. The committee has additionally transferred funds to a separate committee, known as Save America, that has supported Mr. Trump’s political actions.
The overlapping patchwork of committees that has turn out to be commonplace for presidential candidates can at occasions cloud a marketing campaign’s monetary image. This was the case Saturday with the presidential marketing campaign of Nikki Haley, the previous South Carolina governor and United Nations ambassador.
Ms. Haley’s marketing campaign had stated it raised $11 million within the first six weeks of her presidential run. But when three committees tied to her marketing campaign filed their disclosures on Saturday night time, it appeared that quantity could have double-counted funds transferred between them.
Her joint fund-raising committee, Team Stand for America, took in $4.4 million and transferred $1.8 million to her marketing campaign committee, Nikki Haley for President, which reported an extra $3.3 million in contributions. Team Stand for America additionally transferred $886,000 to her management PAC, which itself raised $600,000 extra.
The marketing campaign seems to have double-counted these two transfers, a complete of $2.7 million, making the precise haul about $8.3 million. A brilliant PAC backing Ms. Haley doesn’t should file a report till July — the PAC reported $2 million readily available on the finish of 2022.
A spokeswoman for Ms. Haley’s marketing campaign stated Saturday night time that the marketing campaign had adopted the precedent set by different candidates of their filings. A consultant for the F.E.C. didn’t reply to a request for remark.
Ms. Haley’s marketing campaign isn’t the primary to rely funds transferred between committees as a part of an total haul: Mr. Trump’s marketing campaign did it in 2021.
Source: www.nytimes.com