Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who finished third in the Iowa caucuses and fourth in Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary, is reinvesting more than $300,000 in campaign spending previously meant for the next two contests in Nevada and South Carolina.

Ad Analytics, which tracks political spending, tweeted Wednesday that the Massachusetts senator was cutting spending in Nevada and South Carolina, where voters head to the polls to pick their top Democrat among a dwindling field of candidates on Feb. 22 and Feb. 29, respectively.

“She has ads running in both states until the 16th, but looks like she’s going off the air after that. So far we’ve seen over $300k cut,” Ad Analytics said.

The move comes less than a month before candidates will vie for 14 states on March 3, Super Tuesday, including Warren’s home state of Massachusetts. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg and former Vice President Joe Biden have pledged to compete in Massachusetts.

The presidential race to see who will face President Donald Trump will be “one of those long primary fights that lasts for months,” Warren told supporters in Manchester as New Hampshire results rolled in Tuesday night.

Warren said either Sanders or Buttigieg would make a better president than Trump, but she also decried the recent negative campaigning in the party and pledged to keep her campaign clean.

“The fight between factions in our party has taken a sharp turn in recent weeks, with ads mocking other candidates and with supporters of some candidates shouting curses about other Democratic candidates,” she said Tuesday. “These harsh tactics might work if you’re willing to burn down the rest of the party in order to be the last man standing.”

Warren on Tuesday night and Wednesday issued a fundraising push, saying there are 98% of delegates left up for grabs and she’s going to keep fighting for them. In emails and tweets, she has asked supporters to chip in at least $2. Like Sanders, she has run a grassroots campaign focused on small donations.

The New York Times reported that Warren cut nearly $217,000 from spending in South Carolina, where recent polling averages according to Real Clear Politics place her in fourth behind former Vice President Joe Biden, billionaire activist Tom Steyer and Sanders. The week prior, she cut about $233,000 in spending from South Carolina, the Times reported. She has recently polled in third place behind Biden and Sanders in the Nevada caucuses.

Sanders won New Hampshire with less than a 2% edge over former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, who has polled behind Warren in South Carolina but has picked up steam following a tight win over Sanders in the Iowa caucuses.

Meanwhile, Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, who’s touting a strong third-place finish in New Hampshire as a boost for the campaign, will have her first ads on air in Nevada on Wednesday. MSNBC reported that the Klobuchar campaign is spending $70,000 on ads in Las Vegas and $94,000 on cable ads statewide.