Today's Article
Whatever the
reason for the extra
dollars, they couldn't
come at a better
time for the Illinois
senator.
The American Spark
Obama Outraised Clinton By 2-1 In March

By Cliff Montgomery - Apr. 5th, 2008

Senator Barack Obama (D-IL) collected an eye-popping $40 million in March for his presidential bid, making
the large $20 million take for that month by Democratic rival Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) seem almost puny
by comparison.

Whether this is the result of Obama's admitted personality strengths or the reaction of recent attacks on his
former pastor--or both--the extra dollars couldn't come at a better time for the Illinois senator.

In politics as in many other things, money is power. The dollar advantage gives Obama a massive campaign
treasury chest with which he may further whittle down Clinton's current lead among Pennsylvania voters before
its crucial Democratic primary on April 22nd.

Such a wealth of new donations also has buttressed Obama's argument to the anti-democratic,
'superdelegate' faction of the Democratic Party that he now has a vast donor and volunteer network too great
to flatly ignore.

Senator Obama has received donations from nearly 1.3 million people, primarily through the Internet.

He has garnered a startling $131 million in the first quarter of 2008 alone; Clinton, by contrast,  pulled in $70
million during the same period. Against most candidates, the New York senator's treasure chest would be
quite an achievement.

Regardless, she certainly has out-performed the clearly struggling presumptive Republican nominee, Senator
John McCain (R-AZ). His campaign has--perhaps tellingly--not yet disclosed its fundraising for March. What is
known is that McCain has lagged far behind Obama and Clinton in the money race, only raking in a total of
about $23 million for the first two months of the year.

Who knew that running on a promise of continuing the worst policies of the most incompetent, unpopular
president in living memory would be a campaign killer?

David Plouffe, Obama's campaign manager, told reporters that he sees a double advantage from his
campaign's impressive fundraising.

"Many of our contributors are volunteering for the campaign, making our campaign the largest grass-roots
army in recent political history," he claimed. While
The American Spark could not immediately verify this claim
from Plouffe, we can verify that the Obama campaign's grass-roots efforts--and results--are the best seen on
the Democratic side of the political fence in quite a while.

Clinton perhaps understandably gave her best spin on the fundraising issue to reporters at an apparent
campaign stop in Burbank, CA.

"We're both raising huge amounts of money, and I am thrilled at how effective Democrats have been in raising
money the last 15 or so months," she said. Clinton was in California to sweep that state for additional
campaign funds.

This monetary development of course has given Obama a great spending edge over his party rival in
Pennsylvania--the final huge delegate prize still on the Democratic candidate calendar.

The Illinois senator already has purchased over $2.7 million of television advertisements in Pennsylvania,
according to information compiled by
TNS Media Intelligence/Campaign Media Analysis Group, a political ad
watchdog group.

Clinton, by comparison, has spent about $900,000 on Pennsylvania ads.



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