U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren raised $24.6 million in the past three months of her presidential bid, continuing her upward fundraising trajectory and reflecting her campaign’s continued rise over the calendar year.

The $24.6 million haul puts Warren in second place so far for third-quarter fundraising, just behind fellow progressive U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has topped the field so far with $25.3 million.

And it’s Warren’s highest fundraising sum yet. The Massachusetts senator brought in just $6 million in the first quarter, tripling that to $19.1 million over the second quarter as she continues her rise in the polls.

“This means our grassroots movement is in an incredible position,” Roger Lau, her campaign manager, said in an email to supporters.

David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center, said, “Statistically, she has all of the indicators that you need: rising poll numbers, strong fundraising numbers, great attendance at her rallies and positive coverage from media outlets.”

Warren has benefited during her rise from a relative lack of scrutiny from both the media and her Democratic rivals, unlike Sanders and former Vice President Joe Biden, said University of New Hampshire political science professor Dante Scala.

As it stands, Sanders has raised the most on the Democratic side in the past three months, his $25.3 million the highest of any Democratic presidential hopeful per quarter thus far. After Warren’s $24.6 million, South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg raised $19.1 million, Biden raised $15.2 million, U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris earned $11.6 million, entrepreneur Andrew Yang posted $10 million, U.S. Sen. Cory Booker raised $6 million, author Marianne Williamson raised $3 million, Montana Gov. Steve Bullock raised nearly $2.3 million and U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet raised $2.1 million. President Trump and the Republican National Committee raised a combined $125 million.

Sanders and Warren dominated the Democratic money race despite forswearing large-donor fundraisers, far outpacing Biden and Harris even as the latter two crossed the country attending fundraising events. Biden’s fundraising dipped to $15.2 million from $21.5 million in the second quarter as he and Warren fight for the top spot in recent polls.

“It does spell trouble for Joe Biden because he has a lot of obstacles in his way beyond a lack of a strong fundraising quarter,” Paleologos said. “He’s going to have to answer questions about his involvement in this most recent (Ukraine) scandal and he has to show that he can grow.”