
Three-time presidential candidate Ralph Nader. Photo used under Creative Commons license courtesy of photographer Ragesoss.
It’s official. President-Elect Barack Obama not only made history as the first black president, but also by drawing almost $750 million for his campaign — the most ever since anyone cared enough to start tracking such things. And he still has $30 million of it left in the bank.
Meanwhile, McCain, having opted for public financing, could only accept $85 million for the general election. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, he raised about $360 million during his campaign, which includes the public financing, but still puts him far behind Obama in the money race. (Of course, McCain got a serious boost from the RNC, which raised more than $80 million in the weeks leading up to the election.)
The totals for the various third-party candidates obviously pale in comparison to both Obama and McCain: Ralph Nader led the pack with about $4.5 million, followed by Libertarian Party nominee Bob Barr with about $1.2 million, Chuck Baldwin of the Constitution Party with about $260,000, and the Green’s pick, Cynthia McKinney, with about $198,000.
The lesson: Money talks. But you already knew that.
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President Obama, Election '08, Environmental Protection Agency, Politics, politics, Energy, Coal Ash, Environment, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, John Murtha, Defense, New York, West Virginia, Hillary Clinton, Treasury Department, Transportation, Freedom of Information Act, American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, Public I Podcast, Federal Election Commission

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Comments
Posted by: Scribe Lovenguth on December 10, 2008, 6:36 pm