NEWS

Fewer donors give more cash to Kasich

Jessie Balmert
Gannett Ohio

COLUMBUS — Gov. John Kasich might be the top fundraiser in his home state, but plenty of Ohioans are donating to his competitors.

Where they are spending their money might surprise you. Dr. Ben Carson has received more donations, 2,440, than any other candidate in Ohio, followed by U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz, of Texas, with 1,646 and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton with 1,577. Kasich came in fourth, according to the most recent federal campaign finance filings.

But when it came to raising money, Kasich was king in his home state. He raised about $2.2 million, which was more than double the next candidate: Clinton. She raised $779,000 from Ohio donors. Carson and U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio, of Florida, each raised more than $300,000 here.

“It’s not at all surprising that a candidate would raise the most money from his home state, where his base lies,” said Dan Tokaji, an Ohio State University law professor and elections expert.

Kasich’s popularity in Ohio — his approval rating was 62 percent in October — pulled support away from mainstream candidates like Bush and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, but didn’t hamper fundraising for more conservative rivals like Carson and Rubio, Tokaji said. In primaries, candidates who appeal to the conservative or liberal base get the cash, he added.

Rubio collected more money in Ohio than in surrounding Midwest states, in part because of support from Ohio Treasurer Josh Mandel and prominent Cleveland car dealer Bernie Moreno.

Presidential Money

But some donors weren’t sticking with one candidate. For example, the Morenos donated $5,400 to Kasich’s campaign despite their support of Rubio. Edward Hatfield, president of River Trading Company, and his family gave $5,400 each to Kasich and Rubio, then donated $2,700 each to Carson and former Hewlett Packard CEO Carly Fiorina and $500 to U.S. Sen. Rand Paul.

“It’s call hedging your bets. People give money not just because they want to influence elections, but because they want the door to be open whoever wins,” Tokaji said.

Even business mogul Donald Trump, who is financing his own campaign, raised about $21,000 from some “true believers.”

“He hasn’t had a sophisticated fundraising campaign,” Tokaji said. But that hasn’t hurt the billionaire yet. “He’s very good at generating free media.”