I have recently read some disparaging remarks about the fundraising for the Barr campaign.  The campaign began with an exploratory committee in April and the last reports are for July.  The total raised is about $600,000. On average, the campaign has raised $150,000 each month.   If the campaign continues at this rate, it would raise about $1.35 million.
While Barr’s fundraising is far behind the tens of millions raised by the Ron Paul campaign last fall, how has Bob Barr’s fundraising been relative to other Libertarian Party presidential candidates?
The 1996 Harry Browne Presidential campaign raised $1.4 million.   They began raising money in 1994.   While they raised only $41,000 that first year, in 1995, they raised almost $500,000.  On average, they raised $58,000 each month.
During the year of the 1996 election, they raised $900,000 or $82,000 per month. Much of this money was raised between August and November. During the last four months of the campaign, they raised $595,000. This was 66% of the funds raised in 1996 and 41% of the total funds raised by the campaign. During the last four months, they averaged $149,000 each month.
During the period of March through July, the 1996 Browne campaign raised $274,000.   The 1996 campaign raised 2.17 times as much in the last 4 months of the campaign as they raised between March and July.
If the Barr campaign raises 66% of its total funds during the last four months of the campaign, the total raised would be about $1.3 million.  (If 41% of the total funds are raised during the that period, it would be just over one million dollars.)  If the ratio of the funds raised in the final four months to those raised during the five months the Barr campaign has operated is the same as that for the 1996 campaign, then the Barr campaign would raise $1.3 million more, for a total of $1.9 million.
The 2000 Browne campaign raised $2.4 million.  They raised money from 1997 through 2000, on average, $53,000 each month. In 1997, they raised only $79,000. In 1998, they raised more, $267,000.   In 1999, they raised $550,000.Â
And finally, in 2000, the year of the election, the Browne campaign raised $1.5 million, or $140,000 per  month. Nearly one million of those funds, $933,000, were raised during the last four months of the campaign, from August to November.   That is 60% of the funds raised during the final year and 38% of the total funds raised over the four years.
During the period March through July, the 2000 campaign raised $529,000.  During the last four months of the campaign, the Browne added 1.77 times that amount.
If the Barr campaign raises 60% of its funds during the last four months of the campaign, the total would be $1.5 million.  (If it is 38% of the total, it would be $971,000.)  If the ratio of the amount raised from March through July relative to that of the final four months was the same, the Barr campaign would raise another million dollars, for a total of $1.6 million.
The 2004 Badnarik campaign raised $984,000, or $43,000 each month.   While they began raising money in 2003, only $25,000 was raised that year. Most of the funds were raised during the last 4 months of the campaign, $834,761, which is 87% of the funds raised in 2004 and 84% of the total funds raised. The Badnarik campaign raised funds at the rate of $208,000 each month during those last four months. The ratio of the funds raised in the final four months to those raised from March to July was somewhere between 6.73 and 7.19.
If the Barr campaign raises 87% of its funds in the final four months of the campaign, that would result in a total of $4.6 million. (If it is 84% of the total, then it would be $3.9 million.)  If the Barr campaign raises 7.19 times as much money in the last four months of the campaign relative to the March through July period, then another $4.3 million would be raised for a total of nearly $5 million.
The figures for June and July showed the Barr campaign raising money at a rate of nearly $200,000 each month.  Can there be slow months? Perhaps. The Browne campaign only raised $72,000 in August of 1996, but made up for that by raising almost a quarter of a million dollars in the weeks leading up to the election.  The Browne campaign only raised $92,000 in June of 2000.   The Badnarik campaign, on the other hand, was raising close to $200,000 each month after its very slow start in July, but still, was close to $300,000 in the weeks before the election.
Will the Barr fundraising take off like Paul’s did in the fall of 2007?  We can hope so. But if history provides any lesson, it is that Barr’s fundraising will improve over the next four months.








