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WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama set a high bar for 2012
presidential campaign fundraising after reporting a haul of $46
million in his second quarter campaign finance filings released on
Friday. The president's campaign is, yet again, relying on a mix of
small-dollar donors and big-dollar bundlers to pay for a campaign that
experts project will raise a total of close to $1 billion. Obama's
closest competitor in the money race is former Massachusetts Governor
Mitt Romney, who raised $18 million in the second quarter.

Obama's campaign pulled in 47 percent of its contributions from donors
giving less than $250, an indication that the president still has the
support of the donor base that drove him to victory in 2008.
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On 7/18/11 1:03 PM, jps wrote:

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama set a high bar for 2012
presidential campaign fundraising after reporting a haul of $46
million in his second quarter campaign finance filings released on
Friday. The president's campaign is, yet again, relying on a mix of
small-dollar donors and big-dollar bundlers to pay for a campaign that
experts project will raise a total of close to $1 billion. Obama's
closest competitor in the money race is former Massachusetts Governor
Mitt Romney, who raised $18 million in the second quarter.

Obama's campaign pulled in 47 percent of its contributions from donors
giving less than $250, an indication that the president still has the
support of the donor base that drove him to victory in 2008.



Obama has also helped the DNC raise about $40 million so far.
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On 18/07/2011 11:03 AM, jps wrote:

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama set a high bar for 2012
presidential campaign fundraising after reporting a haul of $46
million in his second quarter campaign finance filings released on
Friday. The president's campaign is, yet again, relying on a mix of
small-dollar donors and big-dollar bundlers to pay for a campaign that
experts project will raise a total of close to $1 billion. Obama's
closest competitor in the money race is former Massachusetts Governor
Mitt Romney, who raised $18 million in the second quarter.

Obama's campaign pulled in 47 percent of its contributions from donors
giving less than $250, an indication that the president still has the
support of the donor base that drove him to victory in 2008.


Obama is going down....babababababa
Obama is going down right now from debt and despair...babababababa

Because he is all mouth and no action debt welsher greed pandering idiot....
--
What government fears the most is that the people correctly learn that
they need government less than the government needs them.
Say no more debt, no more debt-slave taxes. Economic freedom matters too!
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jps jps is offline
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Posts: 7,720
Default Good news !!!

On Mon, 18 Jul 2011 16:16:38 -0400, Harryk
wrote:

On 7/18/11 4:08 PM, I_am_Tosk wrote:
In ,
says...

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama set a high bar for 2012
presidential campaign fundraising after reporting a haul of $46
million in his second quarter campaign finance filings released on
Friday. The president's campaign is, yet again, relying on a mix of
small-dollar donors and big-dollar bundlers to pay for a campaign that
experts project will raise a total of close to $1 billion. Obama's
closest competitor in the money race is former Massachusetts Governor
Mitt Romney, who raised $18 million in the second quarter.

Obama's campaign pulled in 47 percent of its contributions from donors
giving less than $250, an indication that the president still has the
support of the donor base that drove him to victory in 2008.


This last paragraph is bull****. The democrats and their donors are well
known for cheating on the limits and bundling... They apologize after
the elections and promise not to do it again...



What's bull**** is your made-up, paranoid "takes" on things political.


As usual, Canook talks from his ass...

Here's the rest of the article:

This doesn't mean that the Obama campaign is shunning big money. The
campaign also relied on a stable of 244 bundlers, donors who collect
checks to deliver to the campaign. Those bundlers delivered at least
$37 million, according to campaign's report of the minimum amount each
bundler produced. This total was for both the Obama campaign and the
Obama Victory Fund, a joint fundraising vehicle, according to campaign
spokesman Ben LaBolt.

The campaign also relied on a joint fundraising vehicle that forwarded
$20.5 million to the Democratic National Committee and $12.75 million
to Obama for America. The Obama Victory Fund raised more than 50
percent of its total from donors maxing out at $35,800 and more than
90 percent from donors giving $10,000.

According to a HuffPost analysis of the campaign's money, no single
company or institution emerged as a big source of donations for the
Obama campaign. In 2008, the campaign raised $1.5 million from
employees of the University of California, $994,795 from Goldman Sachs
employees, $854,747 from Harvard employees, $833,617 from Microsoft
employees, and $803,436 from Google employees, according to the Center
for Responsive Politics. This time around, the campaign has not yet
raised more than $100,000 from the employees of any single company or
institution.

The 2012 campaign with the second biggest quarterly haul, that of Mitt
Romney, is currently tapping only the institutional, big-donor money
while failing to raise money from small-dollar donors.

Romney's primary campaign raised only 6 percent of its total money, or
$1.1 million, from donors giving less than $250. Rep. Michele Bachmann
(R-Minn.), by comparison, raised 66 percent of her total haul of $1.6
million from small-dollar donors.



See that? Romney pulled in 6% of his donations from donors of $250 or
less vs. 47% from Obama donors. He's still got grassroots support and
will easily win re-election. Who's going to be the R's candidate?
Bachmann and/or Herman Cain? ****ing joke.
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On 18/07/2011 2:43 PM, jps wrote:
On Mon, 18 Jul 2011 16:16:38 -0400,
wrote:

On 7/18/11 4:08 PM, I_am_Tosk wrote:
In ,
says...

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama set a high bar for 2012
presidential campaign fundraising after reporting a haul of $46
million in his second quarter campaign finance filings released on
Friday. The president's campaign is, yet again, relying on a mix of
small-dollar donors and big-dollar bundlers to pay for a campaign that
experts project will raise a total of close to $1 billion. Obama's
closest competitor in the money race is former Massachusetts Governor
Mitt Romney, who raised $18 million in the second quarter.

Obama's campaign pulled in 47 percent of its contributions from donors
giving less than $250, an indication that the president still has the
support of the donor base that drove him to victory in 2008.

This last paragraph is bull****. The democrats and their donors are well
known for cheating on the limits and bundling... They apologize after
the elections and promise not to do it again...



What's bull**** is your made-up, paranoid "takes" on things political.


As usual, Canook talks from his ass...

Here's the rest of the article:

This doesn't mean that the Obama campaign is shunning big money. The
campaign also relied on a stable of 244 bundlers, donors who collect
checks to deliver to the campaign. Those bundlers delivered at least
$37 million, according to campaign's report of the minimum amount each
bundler produced. This total was for both the Obama campaign and the
Obama Victory Fund, a joint fundraising vehicle, according to campaign
spokesman Ben LaBolt.

The campaign also relied on a joint fundraising vehicle that forwarded
$20.5 million to the Democratic National Committee and $12.75 million
to Obama for America. The Obama Victory Fund raised more than 50
percent of its total from donors maxing out at $35,800 and more than
90 percent from donors giving $10,000.

According to a HuffPost analysis of the campaign's money, no single
company or institution emerged as a big source of donations for the
Obama campaign. In 2008, the campaign raised $1.5 million from
employees of the University of California, $994,795 from Goldman Sachs
employees, $854,747 from Harvard employees, $833,617 from Microsoft
employees, and $803,436 from Google employees, according to the Center
for Responsive Politics. This time around, the campaign has not yet
raised more than $100,000 from the employees of any single company or
institution.

The 2012 campaign with the second biggest quarterly haul, that of Mitt
Romney, is currently tapping only the institutional, big-donor money
while failing to raise money from small-dollar donors.

Romney's primary campaign raised only 6 percent of its total money, or
$1.1 million, from donors giving less than $250. Rep. Michele Bachmann
(R-Minn.), by comparison, raised 66 percent of her total haul of $1.6
million from small-dollar donors.



See that? Romney pulled in 6% of his donations from donors of $250 or
less vs. 47% from Obama donors. He's still got grassroots support and
will easily win re-election. Who's going to be the R's candidate?
Bachmann and/or Herman Cain? ****ing joke.


****ing joke is Americans saddled with debt-tax slavery.

Worse thing anyone ever did was give government the ability to borrow
money and the second worst thing is letting a fleabag like Bernanke
print no value counterfeit money.

All of which is criminal fraud that Obma supports and endorses.
--
What government fears the most is that the people correctly learn that
they need government less than the government needs them.
Say no more debt, no more debt-slave taxes. Economic freedom matters too!
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On Mon, 18 Jul 2011 13:18:41 -0600, Canuck57
wrote:

On 18/07/2011 11:03 AM, jps wrote:

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama set a high bar for 2012
presidential campaign fundraising after reporting a haul of $46
million in his second quarter campaign finance filings released on
Friday. The president's campaign is, yet again, relying on a mix of
small-dollar donors and big-dollar bundlers to pay for a campaign that
experts project will raise a total of close to $1 billion. Obama's
closest competitor in the money race is former Massachusetts Governor
Mitt Romney, who raised $18 million in the second quarter.

Obama's campaign pulled in 47 percent of its contributions from donors
giving less than $250, an indication that the president still has the
support of the donor base that drove him to victory in 2008.


Obama is going down....babababababa
Obama is going down right now from debt and despair...babababababa

Because he is all mouth and no action debt welsher greed pandering idiot....


You might want to rethink your call for people to "go down" with all
mouth.
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Posts: 4,021
Default Good news !!!

On Mon, 18 Jul 2011 14:54:26 -0600, Canuck57
wrote:

On 18/07/2011 2:43 PM, jps wrote:
On Mon, 18 Jul 2011 16:16:38 -0400,
wrote:

On 7/18/11 4:08 PM, I_am_Tosk wrote:
In ,
says...

WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama set a high bar for 2012
presidential campaign fundraising after reporting a haul of $46
million in his second quarter campaign finance filings released on
Friday. The president's campaign is, yet again, relying on a mix of
small-dollar donors and big-dollar bundlers to pay for a campaign that
experts project will raise a total of close to $1 billion. Obama's
closest competitor in the money race is former Massachusetts Governor
Mitt Romney, who raised $18 million in the second quarter.

Obama's campaign pulled in 47 percent of its contributions from donors
giving less than $250, an indication that the president still has the
support of the donor base that drove him to victory in 2008.

This last paragraph is bull****. The democrats and their donors are well
known for cheating on the limits and bundling... They apologize after
the elections and promise not to do it again...



What's bull**** is your made-up, paranoid "takes" on things political.


As usual, Canook talks from his ass...

Here's the rest of the article:

This doesn't mean that the Obama campaign is shunning big money. The
campaign also relied on a stable of 244 bundlers, donors who collect
checks to deliver to the campaign. Those bundlers delivered at least
$37 million, according to campaign's report of the minimum amount each
bundler produced. This total was for both the Obama campaign and the
Obama Victory Fund, a joint fundraising vehicle, according to campaign
spokesman Ben LaBolt.

The campaign also relied on a joint fundraising vehicle that forwarded
$20.5 million to the Democratic National Committee and $12.75 million
to Obama for America. The Obama Victory Fund raised more than 50
percent of its total from donors maxing out at $35,800 and more than
90 percent from donors giving $10,000.

According to a HuffPost analysis of the campaign's money, no single
company or institution emerged as a big source of donations for the
Obama campaign. In 2008, the campaign raised $1.5 million from
employees of the University of California, $994,795 from Goldman Sachs
employees, $854,747 from Harvard employees, $833,617 from Microsoft
employees, and $803,436 from Google employees, according to the Center
for Responsive Politics. This time around, the campaign has not yet
raised more than $100,000 from the employees of any single company or
institution.

The 2012 campaign with the second biggest quarterly haul, that of Mitt
Romney, is currently tapping only the institutional, big-donor money
while failing to raise money from small-dollar donors.

Romney's primary campaign raised only 6 percent of its total money, or
$1.1 million, from donors giving less than $250. Rep. Michele Bachmann
(R-Minn.), by comparison, raised 66 percent of her total haul of $1.6
million from small-dollar donors.



See that? Romney pulled in 6% of his donations from donors of $250 or
less vs. 47% from Obama donors. He's still got grassroots support and
will easily win re-election. Who's going to be the R's candidate?
Bachmann and/or Herman Cain? ****ing joke.


****ing joke is Americans saddled with debt-tax slavery.

Worse thing anyone ever did was give government the ability to borrow
money and the second worst thing is letting a fleabag like Bernanke
print no value counterfeit money.

All of which is criminal fraud that Obma supports and endorses.


You're the joke.
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