Andrew Yang’s campaign brings in $750,000 in a single day

Presidential hopeful raises big bucks to end the year strong, hoping to qualify for next debate

Presidential hopeful Andrew Yang set his own personal campaign record after raising $750,000 on Nov. 30.

Malls and online retailers aren’t the only ones who saw an increase in activity during the holiday kick-off season. Presidential hopeful Andrew Yang set his own personal campaign record after raising $750,000 on Nov. 30.

Yang’s campaign took in more than 18,000 donations to raise more money than any other day during his campaign, according to POLITICO. And he did it without hosting a major fundraising party or pleading with potential donors like other campaigns have done, that he would need to drop out if he didn’t reach his targeted goal.

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“I think what was so cool about this was all it took was ‘This is the end of the month’ and the campaign (stressing): ‘Hey, we’re small dollars here,” Nick Ryan, Yang’s campaign manager, told POLITICO. “Just putting that through a lot of organic channels, not having to drum up any sort of event around it, and we have a base that goes above and beyond.”

The $750,000 intake was part of a bigger goal set by Yang’s campaign to reach $2 million in donations in one week, which Yang tweeted that his campaign achieved early Sunday.

“We raised $2 million dollars in a week and half an hour,” Yang said in a Twitter video. “It’s incredible. I remember when the team talked to me about this goal I said wow that’s incredibly ambitious and aggressive but if anyone can do it, it’s the Yang Gang and there’s no stopping, you, there’s no stopping us, there’s no stopping this campaign.”

Yang’s campaign raised roughly $10 million in the third quarter this year and continues to ramp up staffing, according to POLITICO.

Ryan told the news site that fundraising will enable the campaign to continue in the race as the primary season kicks off.

“We’re starting to show some movement in national polling, and I suspect a lot of the early states are going to reflect that investment as well,” Ryan told POLITICO. “We’re going to continue to staff up, continue to (build) an operation that’s going to compete in Iowa and New Hampshire.”

High up on Yang’s immediate goals is to qualify for the December primary debate. Hosted by POLITICO and PBS NewsHour, candidates must qualify by Dec.12, which means they must reach 4 percent in four polls approved by the Democratic National Committee and have donations culled from 200,000 contributors.

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So far, only six candidates have qualified, including Joe Biden, Pete Buttigieg, Kamala Harris, Amy Klobuchar, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.

Yang’s campaign said he is very close to qualifying. He has achieved 4 percent in three polls and needs one more to qualify. His campaign said he has over 300,000 donors.

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