Reports to detail post-Super Tuesday campaign cash
Source: Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) -- For the first time since the Super Tuesday primaries, voters are getting a look at just how much money presidential candidates and their supporters have been raking in. And whether big-dollar donors are heeding President Barack Obama's belated call for supporting an independent political action committee.
Financial reports due Friday to the Federal Election Commission will also show how much red ink the campaigns are bleeding - or, in the case of the Republican super PAC American Crossroads, how much money some groups have been stuffing in their war chests.
Indeed, much has changed since the March 6 Super Tuesday contests, when Republican voters in six out of 10 states chose Mitt Romney as their preferred nominee to compete against Obama. Rick Santorum has since folded his campaign, and Newt Gingrich has been working with a shoestring budget.
Obama's campaign already said it raised $53 million between it and the Democratic Party last month. But Friday's reports will detail just where his donors' money came from, and if he's added to an already-sizeable army of 500 paid staffers that - as of March 1 - was roughly five times the size of Romney's operation.
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