It takes money to win a presidential election
in the United States, and so far presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary
Clinton's campaign is easily winning that battle.
According
to documents filed Monday with the Federal Elections Commission, Clinton raised
more than $26 million in May and began this month with $42.5 million in the
bank.
By
contrast, presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump's campaign had just $1.3
million. He raised $5.6 million in May, began the month with $2.4 million
and spent
$6.7 million.
Both
Trump and Clinton will get help from their parties and from outside groups
known as super PACs that will spend money on television advertisements backing
the candidates. But it is important for each of them to have a lot of
their own money to spend on ads of their own and campaigning efforts across the
country's 50 states.
The last
presidential election in 2012 shows just how much cash is needed in modern
campaigns.
President
Barack Obama's campaign committee spent $775 million of its own money to get
him re-elected. His challenger, Republican Mitt Romney, spent $460
million. The parties and super PACS added several hundred million more
dollars to the race.
With about five months before the November 8
election, Clinton has outspent Trump $196 million to $63 million so far,
according to the FEC figures. At this point in the 2012 race, Obama had
outspent Romney $232 million to $107 million.
Obama's
campaign was a fundraising machine and entered June 2012 with $109.7 million in
the bank after raising $39 million in May alone, while Romney had about $17
million on hand.
The big
money flowing into the Democratic and Republican parties for every election
further shows why third parties have a hard time competing for the presidency
in the U.S.
Libertarian
candidate Gary Johnson came in distant third place in 2012 and is running again
this year. His last campaign spent a total of $2.5 million, and so far
this cycle has spent $524,000. Green Party candidate Jill Stein has spent
about $450,000 for her 2016 presidential bid after spending just $1 million in
2012
Credit: VOA
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