Klobuchar's presidential campaign raises $4.8 million in third quarter
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Updated: 5:02 p.m.
Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar's campaign says it took in $4.8 million in July, August and September.
The campaign says its third quarter marked its strongest online fundraising since Klobuchar got into the race in early February. She did not say how much cash her campaign has on hand.
The total announced Monday places the Minnesota senator in the middle of the field in fundraising for the third straight quarter. Klobuchar has raised more than some rivals but seven Democratic candidates raised more than Klobuchar during the quarter. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders lead the pack, hauling in more than $25 million followed by Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren who raised $24.5 million.
Klobuchar said Sunday that "we feel good about our number."
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Klobuchar says she's been careful about how the campaign spends money and "I'm staying in this race till the end."
She began airing her first TV ads in Iowa and New Hampshire last week. The ads feature Klobuchar's closing remarks from last month's Democratic presidential debate, in which the moderate Democrat described herself as someone who tells the truth and doesn't make promises she can't keep.
"I don't want to be president for half of America. I want to be president for all of America," she says.
Klobuchar will be on the stage with 11 other candidates for the next Democratic debate in Ohio next week, where the requirements for candidates to make the stage are the same as last month.
But she has not yet qualified for the November debate, when the Democratic National Committee has set tougher thresholds for candidates to qualify.
Klobuchar's campaign says she has met the minimum threshold for the number of unique donors, which the DNC set at 165,000. She still must meet the threshold for polling, which requires candidates to receive 3 percent in at least four national or early state polls, or 5 percent in two early state polls.
Klobuchar raised $5.2 million in the first quarter and nearly $4 million in the second quarter.
Correction (Oct. 7, 2019): The headline of this story misstated the amount of money Klobuchar’s campaign raised in the third quarter.