BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — More than 100 of Hillary Clinton’s biggest donors crowded into the home of Casey and Laura Wasserman here on Thursday night, each having written a check for at least $33,400 to snag a ticket. The Hollywood glitterati in attendance — Elton John performed on the piano; Barbra Streisand mingled in the crowd — were sending her off for the home stretch of the campaign with north of $5 million in fresh funding.

It was a fitting capstone to a remarkable 18 months for Clinton on the lucrative California fundraising circuit, this final event anchored by a host committee of billionaires, Hollywood executives, media moguls and tech investors — Sean Parker, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Haim Saban, Chris Sacca — that each directed $416,000 to Clinton’s efforts.


Clinton calls them her “Hillblazers,” campaign bundlers who have given or raised at least $100,000 for her campaign. And she has erected an unparalleled and unprecedented infrastructure of 1,133 such people — nearly double the number of any past presidential candidate, including President Obama four years ago.

While Clinton and her advisers like to tout her small online donors, it is these bundlers in more than 40 states and four foreign countries who form the true backbone of her financial operation. Combined, this elite $100,000-and-up club has amassed a minimum of $113 million for Clinton and the Democratic Party — and the actual figure is likely far, far higher than that. (The biggest bundlers typically collect millions for campaigns.)

“We had the best base of donors and bundlers and raisers ever in 2008. It was even better in 2012. And it’s much better in 2016 than 2012,” said Wade Randlett, a San Francisco-based Democrat who has raised money for Clinton, Obama and Democratic causes for decades. “The Obama people basically 100 percent in are favor of Hillary. There’s really no loss because of ideology or bad blood. And she has added an enormous number of people, especially women.”

Among her bundlers are celebrities (Will Smith) and sports stars (Earvin “Magic” Johnson), Hollywood directors (Steven Spielberg and George Lucas) and corporate executives (Marissa Mayer and Sheryl Sandberg), Wall Street-types (Marc Lasry), media executives (Haim Saban and Anna Wintour) and members of Congress, including her running mate, Sen. Tim Kaine, who helped raise more than $100,000 for Clinton before he joined the ticket in July. The Clinton campaign said 45 percent of its bundlers are women.

There are also federal lobbyists, from whom the Democratic Party under Obama refused to accept money, a prohibition that has since been rolled back.

This club has expanded to the point where Clinton would now struggle to fit all of these bundlers into a single ballroom. As of the end of June, she counted 496 such individuals and couples. By the end of July, it was 871. On August 31, it was 1,133.

It includes billionaires George Soros, Warren Buffett and Tom Steyer, super lobbyists like Steve Elmendorf and bold-faced names like Calvin Klein and J.J. Abrams. There is also a sprinkling of longtime Clinton family advisers, such as Vernon Jordan.

The assemblage is already more than double the size of President George W. Bush’s vaunted 2004 Pioneer and Ranger program for those who raised at least $100,000; Bush had 548 Rangers and Pioneers. It also dwarfs Obama’s reelection fundraising operation four years ago that had 602 individuals or couples in its $100,000 club, and a total of 770 bundlers who raised at least $50,000.

Remarkably, when Clinton releases a revised list in the coming week, her team of bundlers could be larger than the Bush 2004 and Obama 2012 lists combined.

“Of course, it helps that she's drawing on a political network decades in the making,” said Sheila Krumholz, the executive director of the Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks campaign donations.

The rush of money has provided Clinton a tremendous advantage as she vastly outspends Trump in nearly every facet of the 2016 campaign: on TV, on radio, on mail, on staff, on field operations. Clinton raised roughly $297 million for her campaign and joint committees with the Democratic Party in August and September. That is more in the last two months than the $262.3 million the Republican National Committee touted on Friday that it had raised during the entire cycle.

California is, by far, home to the most bundlers, with 267, but Clinton has members of the $100,000 club in 43 states, plus the District of Columbia, along with ex-pats helping her raise money in England (9 bundlers), France (3), Japan (2) and China (1).

Hillary Clinton's lost of celebrity bundlers includes basketball legend Earvin “Magic” Johnson. | Getty

Beyond the names of its $100,000 bundlers, the campaign has not released how much in total the group has raised. But generally the bigger the check, the more intimate the event. This week, for example, Clinton stopped by a fundraiser in Las Vegas for 45 minutes that was attended by only 10 donors. She netted at least $1 million, as it cost $100,000 to get in the door.

And back in August, Laurene Powell Jobs, the widow of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, hosted Clinton at her Woodside home at an event for only 20 people. Those who attended had to contribute at least $200,000 — making it a $4 million stop. That was part of an intensive three-day swing through California in which Clinton raised at least $19 million across nine different events.

The campaign says it also raised, through September, $231 million in contributions under $200.

There is no law requiring campaigns to disclose their bundlers. Clinton’s campaign voluntarily names those who’ve given or raised $100,000 or more on a monthly basis. Trump has refused to do so.

But her reliance on so many big checks has left her vulnerable to accusations, both from Bernie Sanders during the primary and now from the GOP nominee, that she is in the pocket of those who want special access to a Clinton White House. “Special interests that will tell you exactly what to do,” Trump charged at their most recent debate.

The hacked emails of Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta, released by Wikileaks, offer a window into the lengths that Clinton’s top brass have gone to cater to these mega-donors.

They show, for instance, Podesta lunching with Katzenberg in March 2015, and then Katzenberg asking for a meeting with Hillary Clinton only 12 days later, and then another meeting with Bill Clinton in May. Katzenberg gave $1 million to Clinton’s super PAC that June and hosted a multi-million-dollar event for her campaign at his Los Angeles home in April 2016.

The emails also show Saban, the chairman of Univision, the country’s largest Spanish-language network, reaching out to offer advice and encouragement — and getting a receptive audience. “Haim thinks we are under reacting to Trump/Hispanics,” Podesta wrote in early July 2015 to other Clinton advisers after a call with the billionaire. “Thinks we can get something by standing up for Latinos or attacking R's for not condemning.” The Saban conversation spurred a dozen planning emails inside the campaign.

And when Saban wrote to Robby Mook, Clinton’s campaign manager, on March 15 of this year to say he was “very happy…relieved” at their recent primary victories, Mook wrote back: “Thank YOU for making it possible!!”

Saban and his wife have given a combined $10 million to Clinton’s super PAC, and hosted that $5 million evening at their Beverly Hills home for Clinton’s campaign in August 2016.

With no more stops at the California ATM left this cycle, Mook said that Clinton will rely mostly upon small donors who give online in the final 25 days. “In these last few weeks, it's actually our online donors who almost exclusively will be supporting the campaign,” he said on a conference call this week.

That, and the enormous $150 million Clinton entered October sitting upon thanks to her bundlers.