Hillary Clinton Donald Trump Gary Johnson Jill Stein Jeb Bush Ben Carson Lincoln Chafee Chris Christie Ted Cruz Carly Fiorina Jim Gilmore Lindsey Graham Mike Huckabee Bobby Jindal John Kasich Lawrence Lessig Martin O'Malley George Pataki Rand Paul Rick Perry Marco Rubio Bernie Sanders Rick Santorum Scott Walker Jim Webb

Businessman

Fundraising Totals

Fundraising Totals

Fundraising Details

Campaign Committee Outside Groups Combined Total Raised $333,127,164 $100,265,563 $433,392,727 Total Spent $325,515,461 $97,105,012 $422,620,473 Cash on Hand $7,611,702 $3,160,552 $10,772,254 Debts $0 - - Date of Report December 31, 2016 November 27, 2017 -

Source of Funds

Other: 40.25% Small Individual Contributions (< $200): 25.94% Candidate self-financing: 19.78% Large Contributions: 14.02% Federal Funds: 0.00% Other $134,607,903 40.25% Small Individual Contributions (< $200) $86,749,927 25.94% Candidate self-financing $66,141,713 19.78% Large Contributions $46,873,083 14.02% Federal Funds $0 0.00%

Personal Finances

Total Spent by All Outside Organizations Targeting Donald Trump

Total Spent Total For Total Against $325,164,576 $72,093,057 $252,741,969

Billionaire real estate developer, businessman and television personality Donald Trump -- who had never held public office -- flirted with the idea of running for president for decades before jumping into the 2016 race. Trump ran an unconventional campaign, one that tapped into the frustrations of millions of Americans who felt their concerns were being ignored by establishment politicians. Still, his statements about immigrants, Obamacare and even his own previous positions were frequently rated untrue or misleading by independent factchecking websites. While Trump raised less money than his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, he received free media attention valued at about $5 billion. At 70, Trump was older than any previous U.S. president at the time he took office, and was the fifth commander in chief to have lost the popular vote. He maintained, without credible evidence, that millions of undocumented immigrants voted illegally. Trump chose Indiana Gov. Mike Pence as his running mate. Pence had been a congressman for 12 years, joining the Tea Party Caucus and building a reputation as a strong social conservative.

View detailed expenditures

Campaign & Single-Candidate Groups Targeting Donald Trump

NOTE: All the numbers on this page are for the 2016 election cycle and based on Federal Election Commission data released electronically on 11/27/17.

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