Then there is Elizabeth Warren.
Warren, the Massachusetts senator, has amassed a campaign staff of more than 160 in her first three months as a candidate, dwarfing her rivals. Her campaign is gambling that placing organizers in the early-voting primary states now, particularly in Iowa and New Hampshire, will pay dividends politically next year.
Warren raised more than $6 million in the first three months of 2019, the fifth-most in the field, according to federal filings disclosed Monday. But she churned through that money almost as fast as it arrived, pouring nearly 87 cents of every dollar raised back into spending.
The filings provided the most detailed look yet into the wildly divergent ways the Democratic candidates are constructing their campaigns. The report also cleaved the field into two: the financial haves and have-nots.
Nine Democratic candidates entered April with at least $6 million in the bank (though some got there by transferring money from old Senate campaign accounts, and one, former Rep. John Delaney of Maryland, contributed millions of his own dollars). Six others had less than $2 million and one had $2.8 million.
The contrasts in spending were just as stark. In the first quarter of 2019, Warren spent more on payroll taxes than Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, spent in total, other than the fees his campaign paid for processing online donations.
Buttigieg, a 37-year-old newcomer to the national political scene, spent less than 10% of the $7 million he raised. His fundraising total topped those of a current governor, a former governor and four U.S. senators.
“I think I’ve gone from being viewed as, you know, adorable six weeks ago to now plausible,” Buttigieg said Tuesday on CNN.
The Democratic pacesetter for fundraising remains Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont ($18.2 million raised), trailed by Sen. Kamala Harris of California ($12 million) and former Rep. Beto O’Rourke of Texas ($9.4 million).
Sanders and Harris are using their funds to hold more highly produced — and costly — events. Sanders spent $626,000 on what his campaign categorized as “event/sound/staging” expenditures. Harris spent about $500,000 on her January kickoff rally in Oakland, California, where she drew an estimated crowd of 20,000 that helped intensify interest in her candidacy.
“The No. 1 thing for everyone is: Can you keep going?” said Jess O’Connell, a Democratic strategist and a former chief executive of the Democratic National Committee. “That is just the baseline question.”
Former Vice President Joe Biden has waited on the sideline as the race has developed. But his delayed entry comes with a future financial cost: Biden would have to raise $100,000 a day for two months just to match the $6 million currently held by the ninth-best-funded candidate.
Patti Solis Doyle, who served as Hillary Clinton’s campaign manager in 2008, said campaigns that burned through funds quickly, like Warren’s, needed to be sure they could continue to raise money. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York also spent more than 80 cents of every dollar she raised; she collected $3 million, about half of Warren’s haul.
Warren and Gillibrand both transferred huge sums ($10.4 million and $9.6 million) from their Senate accounts to jump-start their presidential bids. Solis Doyle recalled that Clinton’s 2008 campaign had done the same. But she warned that such spending also came with risk.
“The concept is to build your ship quickly, get out in front in terms of organizers and a field strategy and staff,” she said. “Now obviously the danger in that is you could be building the Titanic.”
Kristen Orthman, a spokeswoman for Warren, said her campaign was being “built to last.” The Warren team is continuing to hire more organizers, including in Nevada and South Carolina, even with a payroll already roughly double that of Sanders and far more than that of Harris, who has a little more than 40 people on staff.
“We have front-loaded a tight-knit team and set our organizational plans, priorities and culture faster and in finer detail than anyone,” Orthman said.
Many candidates spent significant sums buying online ads, in part because the Democratic Party has made having 65,000 donors one of the ways to qualify for the official primary debates. The biggest expense for Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota was $625,000, paid to a digital company for “list acquisition.” Gov. Jay Inslee of Washington put more than half his spending, about $450,000, toward buying digital ads.
“We started out with a lower name ID and an underdog campaign,” said Jared Leopold, a spokesman for Inslee. “We knew that we had to grow our list.”
Digital ads also made up a sizable share of spending for candidates who easily topped the 65,000-donor threshold. Sanders spent $1.5 million on digital ads, O’Rourke spent $1.25 million, Harris spent $1 million and Warren spent nearly $900,000.
“I’m excited that campaigns finally understand the value and return on investment” of digital advertising, said Tara McGowan, a Democratic digital strategist unaligned in the primary. “That is a long time coming.”
The fundraising reports also offer new details on the donors whom the candidates are raising money from.
Sanders overwhelmingly received money from donors who gave less than $200 (84% of his total money raised), as did Warren (70%). Both have sworn off attending the kind of closed-door fundraising events that have long been a staple of the presidential circuit. Gillibrand, Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey and former Gov. John Hickenlooper of Colorado were most dependent on larger contributors, with small donors contributing less than 20% of their money raised.
Harris led the field with $7.6 million collected from contributions more than $200, eclipsing her nearest competitor in that category by more than $3.3 million. She raised approximately $3.9 million from donors who gave her between $2,700, the maximum contribution in the last election cycle, and $2,800, the new legal limit.
Buttigieg raised $2.5 million from larger donors in the first quarter. Several connected fundraisers, including Orin Kramer, a longtime fundraising bundler and hedge fund founder, have recently signed on to help Buttigieg.
Raising money from large donors typically gets harder for all but the top-tier candidates as the campaign progresses.
“The relatively easy money is in the first quarter: It’s all your family and friends,” said Tom Nides, a veteran Democratic fundraiser and former top deputy to Clinton at the State Department. “The second quarter is different. Now you’ve got to start convincing people in the second quarter.”
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.