The Wichita Eagle

Harris campaign says it has raised $540 million

- BY KHALEDA RAHMAN Newsweek

Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign announced that it has raised $540 million since she entered the race for the White House, building a formidable war chest for the election fight against former President Donald Trump.

The campaign saw a surge in donations during the Democratic National Convention in Chicago earlier this week, where Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, accepted their nomination­s, campaign chair Jen O’Malley Dillon wrote in a memo released Sunday.

“In just over a month since we launched our campaign, Team HarrisWalz raised $540 million – a record for any campaign in history,” she wrote in the memo.

“Just before Vice President Harris’ acceptance speech Thursday night, we officially crossed the $500 million mark. Immediatel­y after her speech, we saw our best fundraisin­g hour since launch day.”

The fundraisin­g totals were raised by Harris for President, the Democratic National Committee and joint fundraisin­g committees, she wrote.

Trump’s campaign has also raked in significan­t amounts in donations but appears to be lagging behind Harris’ numbers.

The Republican nominee’s campaign and related affiliates announced that they had raised $138.7 million in July, and the

Trump campaign reported having $327 million in cash on hand at the start of August.

Trump’s fundraisin­g total for the whole month of July was less than half of what Harris’ campaign brought in during its early days in July. The vice president’s team reported raising $310 million in

July and having $377 million cash on hand at the start of August.

Both the Harris and Trump campaigns have been contacted for comment via email.

In her memo, O’Malley Dillon wrote that about a third of donations to Harris’ campaign during the week of the convention came from first-time contributo­rs. She also said the campaign signed up people for almost 200,000 volunteer shifts since the first day of the Democratic National Convention.

The campaign “is using those resources and enthusiasm to build on our momentum, taking no voters for granted and communicat­ing relentless­ly with battlegrou­nd voters every single day between now and Election Day-all the while Trump is focused on very little beyond online tantrums and attacking the voters critical to winning 270 electoral votes,” she wrote.

Harris entered the race on July 21, when President Joe Biden quit his reelection bid under pressure from Democrats concerned about his ability to beat Trump following a disastrous performanc­e in a June 27 debate.

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