WASHINGTON - President Bush and Democratic
nominee-to-be John Kerry are on track to spend nearly a half-billion
dollars vying for the White House this year, making it the most
expensive presidential race in history.
Bush already has reached his goal of raising a record $170
million, with more fund raising to come. His supporters believe he
could easily reach $200 million or more -- and that's before he gets
a government grant of about $75 million in September for his
general-election campaign.
Kerry has set a fund-raising goal of about $105 million and is
expected to take the $75 million in full public financing for the
general election.
That would put presidential spending in the $455 million range --
not counting the tens of millions of dollars the Democratic and
Republican parties and outside groups will pour in.
The 2000 race holds the record -- Bush and Democratic nominee Al
Gore raised about $290 million total. Bush raised a record $106
million for the primaries while Gore took public money and was
limited to about $49 million in primary spending.
Bush started March with $110 million in the bank, a campaign
finance report Bush filed Friday showed. Kerry's February campaign
finance report is due today at the Federal Election Commission.
Bush took in $13.7 million in February and has raised more than
$8 million this month, his latest finance report and donations
posted on his campaign Web site through March 9 show. The campaign
held several fund-raisers in the past week and continued raising
money online, putting it safely at or possibly over the $170 million
mark.
One pro-Kerry group, the Media Fund, on Friday disclosed the
names of its individual donors. It has raised at least $3.4 million
from them since November, including $1 million each from Ohio
business executive Peter Lewis and Hollywood executive Steve Bing.
Other givers included actors Paul Newman, $25,000; Kevin Bacon,
$7,500; and Chevy Chase, $2,500. -- ASSOCIATED PRESS
Web lets you see what neighbor
gave
NEW YORK -- Want to find out how much your neighbors are
contributing to candidates for president?
Just visit the Web site fundrace.org and type your address and
ZIP code into the "Neighbor Search" tool. You will get a list of
what those who live closest to you gave to candidates last year, if
the amount was at least $200.
Your nearest neighbors are listed first, thanks to a technology
called geocoding, which matches street addresses with longitude and
latitude data. Visitors also can search by names.
Presidential candidates are required to disclose contributions of
$200 or more, and the Federal Election Commission makes databases
available for download.
Campaign contribution data through Dec. 31 are currently
available, and the site's developer, Michael Frumin, plans to add
more information as it becomes available.
Frumin said Friday that 30,000 to 40,000 people have conducted
100,000 searches since the feature was launched on Wednesday.
Fundrace.org is a project of Eyebeam, a New York organization
that explores the intersection of arts and sciences.
Other sites have more extensive databases and search
capacity.
Opensecrets.org, run by the Center for Responsive Politics, lets
you search by state, occupation or employer and has data going back
to 1989. It also permits searching of so-called soft money donations
to party organizations.
The FEC site, http://www.fec.gov/, also lets you do
that using its "advanced search." -- ASSOCIATED PRESS