It appears that nothing is holding her back now that Hillary Clinton has officially become the Democratic nominee for president. With “cash machine” Tim Kaine by her side, the Democratic ticket’s fundraising operation is in full swing, and the money—Big Money—is pouring in.
On Tuesday, the campaign announced a record take of $90 million last month for the candidate and the Democratic Party, not including that brought in by the Super PACs supporting her bid. Republican nominee Donald Trump raised a reported $80 million last month.
According to CNN, “Clinton will look to match her July haul with a series of August fundraisers, including star studded late-August events hosted by Oscar-winning actors and tech billionaires like Tim Cook, the CEO of Apple.”
No longer bird-dogged by climate activists for accepting fossil fuel industry dollars, on Tuesday Clinton attended a private fundraiser in Aspen reportedly hosted by Charif Souki, son of the founder of liquefied natural gas company Cheniere Energy. CNN Politics producer Dan Merica estimated that the nominee raked in $650,000, “but likely more,” based on attendance at the event, where dinner plates reportedly cost $10,000 to $50,000.
And on Monday, the former secretary of state headlined an intimate reception hosted by Warren Buffett’s daughter Susie in Omaha, Nebraska—attended by 15 people at $100,000 a pop.
Kaine, described by Politico as “one of the Democratic Party’s most powerful fundraisers,” is doing his part, too. On Tuesday, the vice presidential nominee attended his first fundraising event in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Hosted by “Democratic mega-donor Sharon and Mitchell Berger,” CNN reported a haul of “at least $300,000, according to attendee figures and ticket prices.”
According to Politico, the Virginia senator is “expected to play a major behind-the-scenes role on the money circuit,” and has 10 more events scheduled for the next 10 days.
“Kaine won’t just serve as a shiny new attraction,” writes Gabriel Debenedetti. “His talent at the art of big donor maintenance dates back to his time running the national party, and fundraisers close to the campaign are hoping his position as a full-fledged member of President Barack Obama’s finance circles will help pull any remaining skeptical Obama-era tycoons off the bench for Clinton.”
Howard Wallach, chair of the Democratic Party in Pitkin County, where the Aspen fundraiser was held, told the Aspen Daily News that such high-priced events “are a necessary part of politics now in the Citizens United world.”
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