Results 1 to 3 of 3
Like Tree2Likes

Thread: Donald Trump isn't opening his checkbook to save his campaign

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

  1. #1
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    55,883

    Donald Trump isn't opening his checkbook to save his campaign

    Donald Trump isn't opening his checkbook to save his campaign

    By Theodore Schleifer, CNN
    Updated 8:32 AM ET, Fri October 28, 2016

    Story highlights

    Trump has only given $56 million to his campaign when he promised $100 million
    With only 11 days remaining, it is likely too late to spend tens of millions of dollars more wisely, experts say

    (CNN)If Donald Trump were to honor his pledge to spend $100 million of his own money on his campaign, he would have to invest and spend $44 million at breakneck speed.

    And even then, Republicans warn, it would not do much good.

    Trump, the billionaire businessman whose outsider appeal was bolstered by his seeming ability and desire to self-fund his campaign, only gave $31,000 to his effort over the first three weeks of October. This after as recently as Wednesday the Republican presidential nominee insisted he will cross the $100 million threshold by the end of the election, something GOP allies have urged him to do for months to resuscitate his stumbling campaign and augment their capabilities on the air and the ground.

    Now, though, it may be too late.

    If Trump cut the massive check to hit the magic number -- and that's an enormous if -- he is essentially left with two bad options, observers say. He could try in vain to hire last-minute organizers or beef up data capabilities, but those fixed operations take months to develop.

    Or he could write a check to fund a last-minute advertising barrage and come closer to parity with Hillary Clinton and her associated super PACs on the air -- a likelier scenario, but one with tremendous diminishing returns given the cost and availability of advertising slots with less than two weeks to go.

    "It's much harder to scale up the turnout stuff because a lot of that is human capital. Can you find more people?" said Mike DuHaime, who has guided general election budgets at the Republican National Committee and for John McCain. "Putting a lot into the ground game at this stage is smart, but it's hard to do."

    Trump's campaign has only $16 million on hand, largely thanks to his poor performance with the party's most elite donors, who only loaded $11 million into the high-dollar Trump Victory fund in the first part of October.

    Clinton, meanwhile, has $62 million as of October 20, and her super PAC Priorities USA has an additional $15 million.
    For Trump, this adds up to trouble for a candidate trailing or neck-and-neck in the swing states he needs to win in order to capture the White House, such as Ohio, Florida, New Hampshire, North Carolina and Pennsylvania. Given that Trump's path to 270 electoral votes is much narrower than Clinton's, the money deficit could easily prove fatal.

    Yet Trump has been kept alive by online donors -- plus his willingness, no matter how elusive it seemed at points, to dig into his billions of net worth and independently finance a bid.

    Trump in fundraising emails Thursday promised to triple-match his supporters' most recent contributions received through Monday -- and he notably did not include a $2 million cap on that match as he has on solicitations throughout the year.

    "With Hillary Clinton dominating the airwaves thanks to her huge contributions from liberal elites, AND all her media friends lying about me on TV all day, our final ad blitz needs to be huge," Trump wrote. "If you wait to contribute tomorrow, it will be too late, Friend. We need to buy more 30-second ad slots now."

    And he repeatedly told CNN's Dana Bash on Wednesday that the $100 million total was still accurate, flatly dismissing any skepticism and even suggesting he could give "much more."
    s
    "I will have over $100 million in the campaign, and I'm prepared to go much more than that," Trump said.

    That hasn't happened -- and the Trump campaign did not respond to a request for comment Thursday evening if he still would.

    Why didn't he give more? And spend it earlier?

    Experienced Republican budgeters have for months stressed that cash that arrived too late in the campaign would have limited utility, and that guidance has been especially sharp for Trump given that he started the general election with no fundraising or data infrastructure.

    GOP operatives have fretted since the summer about states where Trump can afford just a half-dozen aides in a swing-state; or where second-tier media markets in battlegrounds do not see any television advertising; or where the infrastructure for tracking early voting is dilapidated and under-funded.

    The date long circles on Republicans' calendar: Labor Day, after which, they argued, Trump would begin to see diminishing returns to his money.

    Trump did not begin television advertising until late into the summer -- ceding the airwaves to Clinton until the nominating conventions wrapped -- and still maintains a skeletal staff compared to the Clinton behemoth in Brooklyn.

    Yet Trump has steadily donated $2 million a month to his campaign for virtually the entire race, smaller chunks than he gave to the campaign during the primary, when he was self-funding nearly entirely. And Republicans now stress that his ability to self fund -- widely celebrated and popular during the primary -- is now largely worthless with two weeks to go, if he even does so.

    How to spend $44 million in 11 days?

    Jim Bognet, a Republican strategist who bought ads for Mitt Romney in 2012 and has experience with self-funding candidates like David Dewhurst in Texas, said Trump could easily find a way to spend $44 million in a tiny timeframe -- but that money would be spent carelessly.
    "If you don't care about price and efficiency, you could definitely spend tens of millions of incremental dollars in a presidential race in the last 10 days of campaign," he said. "In crowded swing state airwaves, it's hard to get incremental space on broadcast TV at this time in true battlegrounds."

    Bognet had a few ideas for the Trump campaign. It could air television ads in second-tier states like Arizona or Utah -- red states where he's facing strong challenges from Clinton or independent candidate Evan McMullin -- or do massive national cable buys on pricey channels like ESPN. It could invest big in radio, a relatively available medium where Bognet recalls making reservations in 2012 just 24 hours before Election Day. Or Trump could pay for turnout calls in every particular language -- even up to on Election Day.

    "The problem with all of this is it is super expensive," Bognet said. "So the closer you get to Election Day, the more crowded with other campaign and super PAC ads are, and often the harder it is to either get bang for your buck or placement."

    Trump during the primaries touted his ability to win on the cheap, especially compared to candidates like Jeb Bush who went nowhere despite spending tens of millions of dollars. He seemingly lamented the political spending game Wednesday in the interview with Bash.

    "In the old days, you'd get credit: If you would spend less money and have victory, that would be a good thing," Trump said. "Today, they want you to spend money."

    Trump has also struggled to steer his donors to a viable super PAC behind his bid, like Clinton has with her Priorities USA. The National Rifle Association has been Trump's biggest defender on television, and a second PAC funded by the powerful Adelson and Ricketts families showed initial signs of progress earlier this fall, but neither has matched the Clinton juggernaut.

    Many Republicans, at this point, don't expect the major injection of cash to happen. And in fact, a rich irony was revealed thrust Thursday upon Trump, a candidate who has attacked Clinton for not investing more of her own money in his campaign.

    It was Clinton -- with her $50,000 donation -- who was the biggest self-funder in October.

    http://www.cnn.com/2016/10/28/politi...ion/index.html
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  2. #2
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Posts
    55,883
    LOL!!!! All of a sudden CNN is worried about how much MORE money Trump spends on his own campaign that they've declared weeks ago he's already lost??!! SERIOUSLY?? Dana Bash from CNN tried to make a big deal of him "writing a check" when she interviewed him after his Hotel Ribbon Cutting, and he told her "next question". That was after she tried to insult him for attending a ribbon-cutting of one of his most important achievements in our nation's capital, the complete renovation of the Old Post Office Building. Oh my God, it is so beautiful!!!

    These CNN People are SICKOS!! They're not right in the head. They have no manners, no class, no decency, no knowledge. Most Americans are thrilled to have the Old Post Office Building restored, it's a National Landmark. What developer whose idea it was to undertake that, whose company actually did it, ahead of schedule and under budget, wouldn't make time to attend his own ribbon-cutting???

    And Donald Trump didn't promise ME or any other Trump Supporter to spend any amount of money. The less he has to spend to win this thing the better and if the CORRUPT MEDIA should succeed in defeating him, we hope he spends no more.

    What is wrong with these people at CNN??!! They're mentally ill. Their hate of Donald Trump is a disease, a mental emotional psychological syndrome of monumental proportions.

    When he wins this election, all their heads will explode, blood will be coming out of the nose, eyes, ears and "wherevers".

    It will fee soooooo good to watch it!!

    VOTE TRUMP AND WATCH MEDIA HEADS EXPLODE ON LIVE TV!!!!




    "Mmmm. This is good. Worth every penny." Robert Duvall in Open Range eating expensive imported chocolate to sooth his sweet tooth before the biggest and best gunfight ever.

    Look folks, here's the bottom-line. We don't want a low-down lyin' treasonous globalist crook who hasn't done anything because she doesn't know how to do anything in our White House running our country. We want someone who knows how to make honest money, doing big things, getting them done on time and under budget, who cares about our workers, our businesses, our borders, our trade, our infrastructure, military, Veterans and "ghettos" and has a 50 year track record to prove it.

    GO TRUMP GO!!!!!
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  3. #3
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Nebraska
    Posts
    2,892
    I never watch CNN but this morning Karl Rove came on and I can't stand him so switched over there for about 15 minutes. Talk about propaganda. They made it sound like Trump supporters were going to come unglued and cause all sorts of murder and mayhem if Hillary wins. The sad thing is there are people who believe this stuff. God help us all!

Similar Threads

  1. How Donald Trump helped save New York City
    By Judy in forum General Discussion
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 11-22-2017, 07:46 PM
  2. Replies: 2
    Last Post: 10-26-2016, 02:22 PM
  3. Replies: 2
    Last Post: 10-13-2016, 02:06 AM
  4. SNL Opening Parody - Donald Trump 4/2/16
    By artist in forum General Discussion
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 04-04-2016, 06:52 PM
  5. PM Modi instrumental in opening up India: Donald Trump
    By Newmexican in forum Videos about Illegal Immigration, refugee programs, globalism, & socialism
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 09-30-2015, 09:34 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •