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Harris is raising less money at the DNC than Trump did at the RNC

Now that the speeches are over and the balloons have been swept away, two major questions remain for Democrats after last week’s convention.

The first relates to the polling noise Kamala Harris expects to come out of Chicago, which may take time for the data to provide a definitive figure.

The second is the amount of money she and fellow executive Tim Walz have managed to bring in – and here at least there’s one answer that might prove surprising.

Harris campaign manager Jen O’Malley Dillon revealed Sunday that she had raised $82 million during the nearly week-long affair. Adjusted for inflation, that is Less than the $70 million Biden managed four years ago during a convention held in the middle of the COVID pandemic.

That also puts him close to the $85 million Republicans took in last month during their rival convention in Milwaukee. The latter, however, took place under unusual circumstances, coming immediately after the assassination attempt on nominee Donald Trump.

In all, the Harris campaign said it has raised $540 million since she declared on July 21, a third of which she says has come from first-time donors. This would suggest that Harris is reaching voters that Biden could not.

“This is the largest ever for any presidential campaign in this time frame,” O’Malley Dillon said, according to Reuters. report.

The numbers cannot yet be independently verified, but both campaigns are required to file monthly fundraising updates with the Federal Election Commission. That means there’s little incentive to play fast and loose with these estimates.

Campaigns flood Pennsylvania with ads

While national polls suggest Harris enjoys a slight lead over Trump, that is within the margin of error, and both have several paths to winning the 270 electoral college votes needed.

Most experts believe the eventual winner will be whoever locks up Pennsylvania’s 19 electoral votes, winning in deep purple communities like Erie County.

According to AdImpact data cited by CNN last week, spending in the Keystone State by both campaigns since Harris joined the race last month has exceeded that of any other battleground, reaching roughly double the amount spent in Michigan and Georgia.

The economy is again expected to play a major role on Election Day with many Americans feeling poorer, despite an American economy that has outperformed all of its peers, triggering the term “vibecession.”

While Trump is focusing on familiar issues like extending the 2017 tax cuts and imposing a punitive 60 percent tariff on goods imported from China, Harris is countering with a plan to tax unrealized capital gains for the ultra-rich and to restrict corporate price growth. and “greed”.

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