Bernie Sanders’ campaign raised more money in March than it did during the record-breaking period in February, which surpassed all other presidential contenders, including presumed front runner Hillary Clinton, who appears to be losing her unassailable lead for the nomination a second time.

“What this campaign is doing is bringing together millions of people contributing an average of just $27 each to take on a billionaire class which is so used to buying elections,” Sanders said. “Working people standing together are going to propel this campaign to the Democratic nomination and then the White House.”

Sanders’ grassroots campaign, which has now received 6.5 million contributions from 2 million donors, raised $44 million dollars in March, beating the $43.5 million it raised last month. The haul from March brings Sanders’ total for the first quarter of 2016 to $109 million. More than 97 percent of the money was raised online.

Clinton, a former first lady, US senator and secretary of state, looked like she was becoming unhinged when she responded to a Greenpeace activist who asked her to stop taking money from oil and gas companies.

The Center for Responsive Politics found that Federal Election Commission reports show workers in the oil and gas industries have given Clinton $307,561 so far — compared to, say, $21 million from the securities and investment industry, or $14.4 million from lawyers and law firms.

The presidential campaign cannot raise corporate money, but such funds have flowed freely to the Clinton Foundation, while Hillary Clinton’s super PAC received more than $4.5 million from the fossil fuel industry.

In fact, 57 oil, gas and coal industry lobbyists have directly contributed to Clinton’s campaign, with 43 of them contributing the maximum allowed for the primary. Eleven of those 53 lobbyists are working as bundlers and have raised over $1.1 million in combined contributions among them.

Greenpeace asked every presidential candidate to “pledge allegiance to the American people” by rejecting dirty money and promising to end the free spending allowed by the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision. Sanders agreed but Clinton has refused.

Scott Parven and Brian Pomper, lobbyists at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, have contracts with the Southern California-based oil giant Chevron since 2006, totaling more than $3 million. The two bundled Clinton contributions of $24,700 and $29,700, respectively.

Ankit Desai, vice president for government relations at top LNG exporter Cheniere Energy, bundled $82,000 for Clinton, with $38,800 of it coming from Cheniere Energy executives.

ML Strategies’ David Leiter, a lobbyist for ExxonMobil and natural gas exporter Sempra Energy, bundled $36,550 for Clinton’s campaign.

Clinton’s campaign received $2,700 from BP America’s Mary Streett, formerly the top lobbyist for the nuclear power utility Exelon, ExxonMobil lobbyist Theresa Fariello, Anadarko Petroleum lawyers Amanda McMillan and Richard Lapin, Sarah Venuto a lobbyist for America’s Natural Gas Alliance, and Celia Fischer, an America’s Natural Gas Alliance representative who is not a lobbyist.

Aside from lobbyists currently working to advance fossil fuel interests, there is one Hillblazer Bundler — the name for Clinton boosters raising more than $100,000 — who stands out.

Gordon Giffin is a former lobbyist for TransCanada, the company working to build the controversial Keystone XL pipeline. Giffin sits on the board of Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, an investor in the pipeline. The Canadian bank paid Clinton $990,000 for speeches in the months leading up to her presidential announcement. Another Canadian financial institution with an interest in Keystone XL, TD Bank, paid her $651,000 for speaking engagements.

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