Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

> Sarah Rakes in $$$; RNC - $92M, DNC $42M!!!!

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Patriot Games

unread,
Sep 18, 2008, 7:36:17 AM9/18/08
to
http://www.newsmax.com/politics/palin_fundraising_circuit/2008/09/17/131842.html

Palin Rakes in Cash on GOP Fundraising Circuit

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

WASHINGTON — She's got their hearts, now she wants into their wallets.
Less than three weeks after she was named Sen. John McCain's running
mate, Gov. Sarah Palin was back in the battleground state of Ohio as
the newest star attraction on the Republican fundraising circuit.

The Republican vice presidential candidate made her debut as a
national fundraising headliner Monday night at a country club in
Canton, met with donors at a $2,500-a-plate luncheon in a private home
in Cincinnati, and then attended a breakfast Wednesday morning in
Dayton. The first event raised an estimated $1 million, organizers
said, a one-night take that's just shy of the $1.35 million total she
raised in her 2006 bid for Alaska governor.

From now to Nov. 4, Palin is expected to rival the appeal of other top
Republican fundraising draws, such as first lady Laura Bush and Vice
President Dick Cheney. Already, the party is leaning on her, both to
rally the base and encourage supporters to write checks. Online
donations to the Republican National Committee quadrupled after McCain
picked Palin.

"Our party's surge in volunteers, supporters, and crowds in the last
two weeks is mirrored in our fundraising," said Amber Wilkerson, an
RNC spokeswoman.

Palin will be raising money almost exclusively for the RNC and local
Republican parties where she holds the events. In between campaigning,
she's expected to headline as many as 30 to 35 fundraisers from now to
the election. Since the McCain campaign chose to accept public
financing, it's limited to the $84 million allowed by law and cannot
raise additional money.

However, the RNC can raise more money, and so will the Democratic
National Committee and the Obama-Biden campaign, which has opted out
of public financing. Sen. Barack Obama was in California Tuesday night
for two fundraisers, including one in Beverly Hills featuring singer
Barbra Streisand.

Obama's fundraising juggernaut _ which broke records with $66 million
in August — will be matched by the RNC money machine. So far this
year, the RNC has outraised the DNC $92 million to $42 million.

The money from Palin's three Ohio fundraisers will be split between
the Ohio Republican Party and the RNC.

Ohio Republicans are happy to accept the checks, said Kevin DeWine,
the deputy chairman of the state party. The three Ohio fundraisers
were planned well before anyone knew who'd be the vice-presidential
nominee, DeWine said, but the party was pleased to have Palin. Ohio
Republicans expect to see plenty of her over the next several months,
DeWine said, since no Republican has entered the White House without
winning the state.

"Her announcement in Dayton two weeks ago, her performance at the
convention, has served to really close the enthusiasm gap" in the
state, DeWine said. "What we've seen over the past 17 days or so is
nothing short of amazing when it comes to grassroots response."

But Chris Redfern, the chairman of the Ohio Democratic Party,
criticized Palin for failing to address voters' questions on the
economy in her visits to the state while "America's financial markets
are in a state of utter turmoil."

"Instead, she's raising money for John McCain, whose unwavering
support for George Bush's economic policies has sent 250,000
good-paying Ohio jobs packing," Redfern said.

Palin's appeal to Republicans is palpable in places such as Wyoming,
where people don't experience the once-a-week visits now familiar to
voters in battleground states such as Ohio or Pennsylvania. Palin has
a Sept. 24 fundraiser that's drawing people not just from Wyoming, but
also from Idaho and Montana, said Maggie Scarlett, who with her
husband is the finance co-chairman of the McCain campaign in Wyoming.

"We're really talking about a regional type of excitement. We are
inundated with positive reaction and response," she said. "Strictly
from the sidelines, I just think that the Western states are going to
be very important in this election, and I just think it speaks volumes
that she is coming in here. I can tell you, it has generated great
excitement. And it has reinvigorated, certainly, the Republican base."

0 new messages