Romney again tops Obama in fundraising

STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) - Can President Barack Obama raise the money he needs to hold onto the White House?
Money wasn't supposed to be a worry for the president's campaign, which smashed fundraising records in 2008. But Mitt Romney's team has hauled in more than Obama and his allies for a third straight month, raising the once-unthinkable question.
While the race for voter support is tight, according to polls, Romney's robust fundraising and a crush of money from Republican-leaning political action committees have forced the president's campaign to spend heavily through the summer.
Highlighting the challenge for Obama, Romney on Monday reported a July fundraising haul of more than $101 million along with the Republican National Committee, compared to the $75 million that Obama's campaign said it had brought in along with the Democratic National Committee.
During a fundraiser in Stamford, Conn., Obama said Romney's tax proposal would benefit the wealthy at the expense of many middle-class families. "It's like Robin Hood in reverse," he said. "It's Romney Hood." Romney campaign spokesman Ryan Williams countered that Obama was the only "candidate in this race who's going to raise taxes on the American people."
The president also warned that his campaign faced a deluge of Republican money.
"Over the course of the next three months, the other side is going to spend more money than we have ever seen on ads that basically say the same thing you've been hearing for the past three months," Obama said, then summarized their argument as "the economy is not where it needs to be and it's Obama's fault."
Before Romney's summer surge, Obama had not been outraised by an opponent since 2007.
In an email to supporters after the July numbers were announced, the Obama campaign said, "If we don't step it up, we're in trouble."
A huge spending advantage in the final months of a close election can help a campaign as it seeks to sway undecided voters.
Obama officials say they expected Romney to outraise the president through the summer and have made contingency plans if the disparity continues. Part of that planning has involved heavy spending on ads through the spring and summer in an attempt to define Romney for voters before he has access to most of his general election funds.
With the election still three months away, Obama and the DNC have spent more than $370 million since January of last year. In June, the campaign spent more than it brought in.
Seeking to keep its coffers full, the campaign has special plans for some donors who live in reliably Democratic states where the president may not visit in the midst of the campaign. They'll get a chance to fly elsewhere in the country to meet him at an event. The campaign has also been raffling off chances for smaller donors to attend meals with the president or attend events with celebrities such as actor George Clooney.
Obama has been spending big chunks of time making his own pleas. He raised money Monday in Connecticut at two events with Hollywood connections.
One fundraiser was at the Westport, Conn., home of film mogul Harvey Weinstein, where two Academy Awards sat on the mantle before a group that included actresses Anne Hathaway and Joanne Woodward, the widow of Paul Newman, and writer Aaron Sorkin. Weinstein told the audience that Obama showed he was "not afraid to throw a punch. Witness the raid on Osama bin Laden. You can make the case that he's the Paul Newman of American presidents."
The events were expected to bring in at least $2.5 million for Obama's campaign.
Romney, who is closing in on his vice presidential pick, spent Monday at his vacation home in New Hampshire, but he, too, has a series of fundraising appearances this week.
Obama aides say their campaign is bringing in enough money to stay competitive in television advertising. The campaign has already purchased most of its air time in battleground states through Election Day using money it raised earlier in the cycle.
The campaign also has poured tens of millions of dollars into setting up field offices in battleground states, launching registration drives and compiling data on voters — all expensive efforts that could pay dividends for Obama in November. The Romney campaign is still setting up those efforts in some states and will probably have to devote a significant amount of its incoming cash to doing so.
Three months from Election Day, Democrats say Romney's fundraising gains have not forced the Obama campaign to re-evaluate its fall strategy, cut back on staffing or shift resources — signs that would show a campaign in financial trouble.
Les Coney, a top Obama donor in Chicago, said he had heard "zero concern" among the president's finance committee members that the fundraising disparity could hurt Obama's ability to run an effective campaign. "But obviously we're out there hustling, trying to raise money," he said. "You're always looking for new people to support the campaign."
Indeed, Romney's financial advantage means Obama must find time in his schedule to keep personally wooing donors, even as the campaign enters a phase where he will be headlining more big rallies and other public campaign events.
Going strong so far, Republicans say they're optimistic that the Romney campaign can keep up its fundraising prowess through the fall, and they point to the campaign's improved use of online efforts to target independent voters, evangelicals and military voters.
"We are getting an outpouring of support from, not just Republicans, but independents, Democrats and even former Obama supporters," said Woody Johnson, a major Romney donor and the owner of the New York Jets. "People realize just how important this election is to get our economy going again."
Democrats say it's not Romney's campaign fundraising that worries them — it's the influx of money from the GOP-leaning super PACs.
Two of the largest Republican Super PACS, Restore Our Future and Americans Crossroads, have raised about $122 million since the beginning of last year. Democratic-leaning groups Priorities USA Action and American Bridge 21st Century have raised about $30 million in the same time period.
Priorities is turning to President Bill Clinton — a prolific fundraiser — to help boost its totals. The former president will host an event in New York next week.
Obama, after spending two days campaigning in Colorado, will hold three fundraising events in his hometown of Chicago on Sunday, including one at his family's South Side home. The fundraising will be followed by three days of campaigning in Iowa.
In order to compensate for the president's divided time, the campaign is turning to a number of surrogates, including Michelle Obama, to raise money. The first lady is holding events in Jackson, Wyo., on Saturday and a family-oriented fundraiser with members of the band No Doubt at the Beverly Hills, Calif., home of lead singer Gwen Stefani.
Romney is also dividing much of his time between events with voters and fundraising. He has both fundraisers and public events in Illinois, Iowa and New York this week, then launches a four-state bus trip on Saturday through Virginia, North Carolina, Florida and Ohio.
___
Pace reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Jack Gillum in Washington and Steve Peoples in Wolfeboro, N.H., contributed to this report.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
Money wasn't supposed to be a worry for the president's campaign, which smashed fundraising records in 2008. But Mitt Romney's team has hauled in more than Obama and his allies for a third straight month, raising the once-unthinkable question.
While the race for voter support is tight, according to polls, Romney's robust fundraising and a crush of money from Republican-leaning political action committees have forced the president's campaign to spend heavily through the summer.
Highlighting the challenge for Obama, Romney on Monday reported a July fundraising haul of more than $101 million along with the Republican National Committee, compared to the $75 million that Obama's campaign said it had brought in along with the Democratic National Committee.
During a fundraiser in Stamford, Conn., Obama said Romney's tax proposal would benefit the wealthy at the expense of many middle-class families. "It's like Robin Hood in reverse," he said. "It's Romney Hood." Romney campaign spokesman Ryan Williams countered that Obama was the only "candidate in this race who's going to raise taxes on the American people."
The president also warned that his campaign faced a deluge of Republican money.
"Over the course of the next three months, the other side is going to spend more money than we have ever seen on ads that basically say the same thing you've been hearing for the past three months," Obama said, then summarized their argument as "the economy is not where it needs to be and it's Obama's fault."
Before Romney's summer surge, Obama had not been outraised by an opponent since 2007.
In an email to supporters after the July numbers were announced, the Obama campaign said, "If we don't step it up, we're in trouble."
A huge spending advantage in the final months of a close election can help a campaign as it seeks to sway undecided voters.
Obama officials say they expected Romney to outraise the president through the summer and have made contingency plans if the disparity continues. Part of that planning has involved heavy spending on ads through the spring and summer in an attempt to define Romney for voters before he has access to most of his general election funds.
With the election still three months away, Obama and the DNC have spent more than $370 million since January of last year. In June, the campaign spent more than it brought in.
Seeking to keep its coffers full, the campaign has special plans for some donors who live in reliably Democratic states where the president may not visit in the midst of the campaign. They'll get a chance to fly elsewhere in the country to meet him at an event. The campaign has also been raffling off chances for smaller donors to attend meals with the president or attend events with celebrities such as actor George Clooney.
Obama has been spending big chunks of time making his own pleas. He raised money Monday in Connecticut at two events with Hollywood connections.
One fundraiser was at the Westport, Conn., home of film mogul Harvey Weinstein, where two Academy Awards sat on the mantle before a group that included actresses Anne Hathaway and Joanne Woodward, the widow of Paul Newman, and writer Aaron Sorkin. Weinstein told the audience that Obama showed he was "not afraid to throw a punch. Witness the raid on Osama bin Laden. You can make the case that he's the Paul Newman of American presidents."
The events were expected to bring in at least $2.5 million for Obama's campaign.
Romney, who is closing in on his vice presidential pick, spent Monday at his vacation home in New Hampshire, but he, too, has a series of fundraising appearances this week.
Obama aides say their campaign is bringing in enough money to stay competitive in television advertising. The campaign has already purchased most of its air time in battleground states through Election Day using money it raised earlier in the cycle.
The campaign also has poured tens of millions of dollars into setting up field offices in battleground states, launching registration drives and compiling data on voters — all expensive efforts that could pay dividends for Obama in November. The Romney campaign is still setting up those efforts in some states and will probably have to devote a significant amount of its incoming cash to doing so.
Three months from Election Day, Democrats say Romney's fundraising gains have not forced the Obama campaign to re-evaluate its fall strategy, cut back on staffing or shift resources — signs that would show a campaign in financial trouble.
Les Coney, a top Obama donor in Chicago, said he had heard "zero concern" among the president's finance committee members that the fundraising disparity could hurt Obama's ability to run an effective campaign. "But obviously we're out there hustling, trying to raise money," he said. "You're always looking for new people to support the campaign."
Indeed, Romney's financial advantage means Obama must find time in his schedule to keep personally wooing donors, even as the campaign enters a phase where he will be headlining more big rallies and other public campaign events.
Going strong so far, Republicans say they're optimistic that the Romney campaign can keep up its fundraising prowess through the fall, and they point to the campaign's improved use of online efforts to target independent voters, evangelicals and military voters.
"We are getting an outpouring of support from, not just Republicans, but independents, Democrats and even former Obama supporters," said Woody Johnson, a major Romney donor and the owner of the New York Jets. "People realize just how important this election is to get our economy going again."
Democrats say it's not Romney's campaign fundraising that worries them — it's the influx of money from the GOP-leaning super PACs.
Two of the largest Republican Super PACS, Restore Our Future and Americans Crossroads, have raised about $122 million since the beginning of last year. Democratic-leaning groups Priorities USA Action and American Bridge 21st Century have raised about $30 million in the same time period.
Priorities is turning to President Bill Clinton — a prolific fundraiser — to help boost its totals. The former president will host an event in New York next week.
Obama, after spending two days campaigning in Colorado, will hold three fundraising events in his hometown of Chicago on Sunday, including one at his family's South Side home. The fundraising will be followed by three days of campaigning in Iowa.
In order to compensate for the president's divided time, the campaign is turning to a number of surrogates, including Michelle Obama, to raise money. The first lady is holding events in Jackson, Wyo., on Saturday and a family-oriented fundraiser with members of the band No Doubt at the Beverly Hills, Calif., home of lead singer Gwen Stefani.
Romney is also dividing much of his time between events with voters and fundraising. He has both fundraisers and public events in Illinois, Iowa and New York this week, then launches a four-state bus trip on Saturday through Virginia, North Carolina, Florida and Ohio.
___
Pace reported from Washington. Associated Press writer Jack Gillum in Washington and Steve Peoples in Wolfeboro, N.H., contributed to this report.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.
*NEWSFLASH* Foreign connected PAC donations to both candidates show Romney outraising Barry by $2m. Probably because Romney is smarter. Course we don't know this because Barry refuses to release his trasncripts. Anyway...scrolling through the list, I noticed a pattern. Most all give something to both parties, but overwhelmingly they all gave more to Romney. Barry needs the unions to step it up.
<br>
To Dems: $4,344,527
<br>
To Repubs: $6,113,478
 @Saving Grace Can you please provide a list of presidential candidates who volunteered their college transcripts?
Now why don't you compare that list to the candidates who have released their tax returns.
Â
You are a dishonest hypocritical troll. But keep it up. You make a very good conservative.
Somehow the whole world knew Bush had a higher GPA than Kerry. How could that be?  The point is, T H I S, demanding 10 years worth is overkill, and the dems admitted it on live TV 2 days ago. It's a distraction from Barry's plummenting approval polls per the chart at RCP.
60% of Romney's funding comes from THREE families. He is NOT getting the smaller donations from voters. He is getting bundles from corporate and billionaire donors. He is NOT popular in the least.  How many Romney stickers have you seen in your area.  Don't be fooled. Most people will write in their favorite republican, rather than vote for him. He's so unlikable and secretive.  Until he releases any full tax returns (2010 was incomplete and they're "still working on" 2011") and until they make public the  emails and other info from his Gov. (his staff were allowed to BUY their hard drives, with all of the State records from his time there,) AND until they actually release the info from the SLC Oympics (again, all of the records were "donated" by Romney to a University there, and are now sealed,) I would NOT vote for the guy.  I have yet to see anyone, republican or Democrat, in DC that actually likes him.  He made his millions by sending jobs to India and China.  His company would buy up companies like Ampad in the Midwest, borrow millions against it to pay themselves bonuses, then fire the workers. then rehire some of them at a lower wage, have them work like dogs to get a bigger value for the company, then sell to a company that sends it overseas.  I learned so much about him from "when Mit Romney Came to Town" a 28 minute film made by a RIGHT WING film maker, now on youtube. Â
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If you vote for someone that made millions NOT by creating jobs (unless jobs in China count,) but by sending them overseas, then you deserve to be unemployed and poor the rest of your life.Â
 @DT I see you're on telelprompter.
@DT You getting paid for that copy and paste from job from Obama's latest speech? if less than half of Americans are buying this BS, why do you think anyone here will? Gallup just showed that people are leaving the DNC in droves.
 @DT Romney supporters don't put bumper stickers on because they would like to keep the paint job free from vandalism and maintain air pressure in all four tires.Â
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BAIIIIINNNNNNN! Keep tryin' Prog.
Â
Hey! Did you know where the President went today? Oh, yeah, he closed off a public beach  so he could perform party tricks for one of the richest men in the world.Â
Â
http://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/politics/Beaches-Close-for-Obama-Visit-Reports-165135156.html
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Obama- Unemployment 8.3 +1. November.
Perhaps Barry should reach in to those deep pockets of his and chip in another $5,000 toward his own cause. Speaking of that, $5,000? Are you kidding me? Apparently Barry only likes to spend the big bucks when the money belongs to someone else.
 @ByeByeBarry Wow.  You're real bright, aren't you?  I guess campaign finance laws and federal limits on personal donations are beyond your limited reasoning skills, aren't they, doofus?
Where are the jobs?! That's the reason obama is losing the fundraising game. All obama can offer are entitlements and welfare. At least with Romney, there is a chance of business growth and jobs.Â
 @GeorgeG. Ummmm... sorry to ruin your rant. But Under the last republican president, the ONLY jobs added were GOVT jobs. Yes.. big govt.  The private sector jobs declined BIG every month.  Under President Obama, we have added private sector jobs almost EVERY month.  Do some homework for god's sake.  You want jobs created in CHINA or INDIA? then vote for Romney...  and if the republicans have the market on creating jobs, why did we lose those millions of jobs under Bush???Â
 @DT Once again the Prog gets it wrong.
Â
Civilian Employment;
January 2001- 135,999,000
January 2009- 142,099,000
July 2012 Â Â Â - Â 142,220,000
Â
http://www.bls.gov/schedule/archives/empsit_nr.htm#2012
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Maybe we have a different view of millions of jobs lost?
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 @DT This just in ! DOJ fines  Gibson Guitars $350,000K for not having fretboards assembled overseas!
 @DT http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390443792604577573010767171448.html
 @GeorgeG. Yeah... in China
 @ducati At least Romney won't spend taxpayer money to ship jobs overseas.
@DT @GeorgeG. What Jobs did bain send over seas? while Mitt was CEO? Name one company? Obama sent nearly 200 billion dollars we barrowed from china to them to help China create jobs. So with your libreral logic can you please tell the world how Obama created jobs by sending US tax dollars to forgein nations?
 @GeorgeG.  Yeah... right.  ANd those fat tax deductions by Bain who sent those jobs overseas, WHO do you think funded those??? That would be us. The taxpayer.  Educate yourself. turn off fox news.Â
 @GeorgeG. Citation needed.
Corporations are people! And that's not Obama's only problem, his favorability ratings went down. Â
Presidential Job Approval - OBAMA
<br>
Gallup: 45% Approve - 48% Disapprove
<br>
Rasmussen: 46% Approve - 52% Disapprove
<br>
RCP Average: 47.1% Approve - 47.8% Disapprove
 @Saving Grace http://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com/. Oh no, Obama's up 6.8 more points in the polls.Â
No... there is NO media bias! Â
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Example #824048398; The upper left hand (natch) of the picture of Romney has been cropped to leave the word,"...hack."
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Must have been "coincidental?"
 @Sid VishessÂ
My Nikon DSLR shoots at 4928 x 3264 pixels. If you resize that to fit 660 x 440 which is the above KOMO image size you basically get about 664 x 440 pixels there are definitely not 4 pixels worth of "S" cropped out from the word "Shack".
Â
Furthermore, if you note the barrel distortion on the people's heads on the edges it goes further to prove the photo was not cropped to the degree you are implying.
Â
You really are letting reality slip away from you.
 @ducati No, you're right. It is just...a... coincidence. Funny though, I could do that crop on my free Picasa program. Or... maybe the shot was taken while the photographer FRAMED the shot with "hack" on the left side. Funny, this stuff absolutely NEVER happens to non-R's.
instead there are always these myterious halos over the D's heads.weird.
 @Sid Vishess You guys get so ridiculous sometimes....
 @TehHawt So it IS a coincidence? Dang.Â
Ever notice that every picture you see of Romney only has white people in the background? Is this a media stunt, or does he only associate with whites?
 @Magic 8 Ball Oh and you white liberals have been disloyal to minorities. While the good jobs go to white folk in the region, minorities only get welfare. How about getting some real diversity in Seattle.Â
 @GeorgeG. LOLWUT?Â
does anyone believe the racism claims will help obama win?
 @Saving Grace heh. Does anyone believe that Obama & Democrats have anything else than false accusations of racism?
@LockesChild It's all they got. They might have to recycle the Greek columns from last election.
 @LockesChild Yeah, brains, which the other side completely lacks.
 @Magic 8 Ball The same reason why the white folk in Seattle only hang out with other white folk. That's why the liberal professional class in Seattle are lily white. Except for the one token minority they use for propaganda purposes. How white is Queen Ann? Bainbridge Island? Vashon Island?Â
 @Magic 8 Ball That's not true remember the "Who Let the Dog's Out" thing?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FDwwAaVmnf4
Â
 @Magic 8 Ball  Yep, the press rounds up all the black folks, and escort them to the side before taking any pictures.Â
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Seriously, what is wrong with your brain man.
 @Magic 8 Ball Since 95% of blacks will vote based on skin color, why waste his time?
 @Sid Vishess I love how conservatives are so quickto whip this story out and then accuse blacks as being the racists who will only vote for the black guy.
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2012/07/31/black-pastors-group-launches-anti-obama-campaign-around-gay-marriage/
Â
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 @T H I S I simply stated a fact (95%). That there are small numbers of exceptions is irrelevant.
Just think if all this political money was donated so a cause that would actually help people?....
I don't think anyone is surprised by this announcement, I know I am not. There are a dozen, maybe fifteen people backing the Romney campaign that are willing to spend as much as needed to assure Willard has all the money he needs to defeat Barry in November. All in hope that the new president will allow them carte blanche business practices that are union and regulation free.
 @left-center Completely true. 60% of Romney's money comes from three families. Period. He does NOT get those donations from actual voters.  He's a fraud.Â
@DT and unions gave 98-100% of all donations to obama. opensecrets.org corporations are people so says the SCOTUS.
@ T H I S - Do you need a union to keep a job? Has your union ever given you information on how to become your own boss?
 @Saving Grace Do you think that it has something to do with the fact that the republicans are openly trying to destroy unions? Â
Do you often donate to candidates who go against your own interest.
Oh wait, you are a conservative. Keep on farking that chicken.
better than putting companies OUT of business has has been the Barry MO.
 @Saving Grace Wow..  dumb comment.  Business are thriving, Corporate profits have risen.  Stock Market has doubled.  Jobs have been added each month: private sector jobs, not govt jobs like Bush added.Â
oops, retraction- that's 500,000 jobs lost PER WEEK.
 @Saving Grace [citation needed]
Â
Oh wait, you have none. @DT on the other hand is simply posting what has been very widely reported.
@DT your jobs #'s are pure lies. i cant count how many months we lost 500,000 jobs PER MONTH ....no way were more created to offset the loss. take your snakeoil elsewhere.
 @Saving Grace Can you please cite which exact companies he put out of business and what exactly he did to put the m out of business?
 @Saving Grace So you are just spouting random crap. Thanks for the clarification.
Â
@T H I SÂ uh, no, but thanx for aksing.
 @T H I S Grace and her half a dozen sock puppet accounts don't cite sources.