There were stays at boutique hotels featuring rooftop pools, private
soirees at members-only, jacket-and-tie clubs, and fund-raisers at the
Four Seasons, the St. Regis, and the Mandarin Oriental.
In the world of Jeb Bush, the campaign for the 2016 Republican
presidential nomination has at times been a whirl of private planes and
high-end affairs, according to the federal filings of Bush's campaign
and his super PAC, Right to Rise, which can raise unlimited funds for
Bush as long as it does not coordinate directly with him.
It is not unusual for US presidential candidates to fly private or
even to sometimes stay in luxury hotels. But some disgruntled donors say
they are unhappy with Bush's large outlays, which also include big
spending on staff and tens of millions of dollars in ad buys.
Eleven of 16 major donors contacted by Reuters questioned whether it
was money well spent, especially given how the one-time front-runner has stumbled badly in the polls and is facing questions about whether he should withdraw from the race.
In contrast to Bush, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, who is running second in
national polls of Republican voters, favors cheaper accommodation
options like Holiday Inn and often flies on budget carriers, campaign
finance filings through the third quarter show.
Several members of the Bush camp vigorously rejected the donor
critiques. Bush spokeswoman Kristy Campbell said, "We are running a
national campaign that is competing everywhere, and we have made
investments that have allowed us to do what serious campaigns must do to
be competitive in the primary and general elections."
The ad-tracking firm SMG Delta says Bush's campaign and Right to Rise
have spent $82 million on ads, significantly more than the three
leading candidates in the Republican race: Donald Trump ($5 million);
Cruz ($11 million), and Senator Marco Rubio ($49 million). The tracking
firm's data is more up to date than what has been reported so far in the
federal filings.
"There is no return on investment on the Bush ad buys, zero," said
one high-dollar donor who asked not to be named, pointing to how the ads
had done little, at least so far, to lift Bush in the polls or dent his
opponents.
On Sunday, donors will learn just how much Bush has spent from his
$100 million-plus war chest. That's when Republican and Democratic
candidates and their super PACs release their latest campaign finance
reports. What is known so far is that Bush and Right to Rise spent at
least $82 million, both in operating expenditures through the third
quarter of 2015 and on ad spending through this month.
The campaign finance reports also show that between June, when Bush
formally announced his candidacy, and September, the Bush campaign spent
$1.2 million on private planes versus the roughly $700,000 spent during
the same period by Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton.
Cruz spent $158,000 on private planes, and Rubio spent $293,300. Trump travels in his own Boeing 757.
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