HARD KNOCKS
Last Thursday DNC chairman Terry McAuliffe told
reporters that under his leadership the national party was going to
close the fundraising advantage that Republicans have long enjoyed.
McAuliffe has forever complained that Republicans have been able to
draw on millions of contributors who respond to direct mail appeals
and who consistently give the party donations under $1,000, but who
give donations consistently, sometimes several times a year.
Touting a new data base with tens of millions of names,
McAuliffe crowed that within several years Democrats would be
pulling in so-called “small” contributors at about the same rate as
Republicans. If the newest filings at the Federal Election
Commission are any indication, though, McAuliffe’s task may be
insurmountable. Since the midterm elections — a fundraising period
that typically is slower than pre-election fundraising — the
Republicans buried the Democrats in hard money raised. The RNC took
in $11 million. The DNC $2.2 million.
In the Senate, Republicans raised about $1.3 million. The
Democrats. Well, they raised $700,000 — this on top of the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee being $6 million in the
hole. Maybe new chairman Jon Corzine can float it
a loan.
In the House, the National Republican Campaign Committee
outpaced its counterpart, the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee, $7 million to $1.7 million.
“We’ll catch up a little bit, but this just shows how far ahead
in hard money donors Republicans are, and how badly we were
indebted to our soft money people,” says a Democratic National
Committee staffer, who says that McAuliffe did not want to discuss
the disparity in fundraising over the weekend while DNC delegates
were in town.
CARRYING ON
Rumors continue that Secretary of Transportation Norm
Mineta, who has been suffering through back problems for
months now, with a number of stints in the hospital, will step
aside in the coming few weeks. No word on a possible replacement,
although both current Secretary of Energy Spencer
Abraham and Secretary of Health and Human Services
Tommy Thompson campaigned for that job during the
2001 Bush transition.