Koster outpaces other statewide officeholders in fundraising
The next election for Missouri's governor is still 1,302 days away. But Attorney General Chris Koster is already gathering financial steam in his probable bid to succeed Gov. Jay Nixon.
The next election for Missouri's governor is still 1,302 days away. But Attorney General Chris Koster is already gathering financial steam in his probable bid to succeed Gov. Jay Nixon.
St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay already has raised more than $106,000 in large donations in less than three weeks. Slay's big donors include Ameren, Anheuser-Busch and the Cardinals. Slay’s chief rival, Aldermanic President Lewis Reed, has collected only one large donation this month.
Dave Spence, Missouri’s Republican nominee for governor, put in another $1 million from his own pocket into his campaign over the weekend. That's in addition to $5 million he put in earlier.
Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon, a Democrat, is heading into the final weeks of the campaign with about three times as much as Republican rival Dave Spence. In fact, the entire Democratic statewide ticket has more money in the bank than any of the Republican contenders.
The five Democrats running for statewide office this year have far more cash on hand than their Republican counterparts, according to fundraising reports posted Thursday on the Missouri Ethics Commission’s website.
Embattled state Sen. Robin Wright-Jones has received a financial boost from the electrical utility AmerenUE, as she seeks to catch up with her two Democratic rivals in the race for the 5th District state Senate seat.
Assisted by a $30,000 loan, state Rep. Scott Sifton put his fundraising into overdrive in his bid for the south St. Louis County-based 1st Senatorial District.
House Speaker Pro Tem Shane Schoeller, R-Willard, finished ahead of the three-person GOP pack running for secretary of state, taking in over $280,000 in the latest fundraising quarter. But Democrat Jason Kander still has the most in the bank.
Republican U.S. Senate candidate John Brunner has put in $2.54 million more of his own money into his campaign, for a total of almost $4.8 million since he launched his effort. Brunner has spent close to $5.2 million. U.S. Sen. McCaskill reports spending more than $8 million, while GOP rivals lag behind.
State Sen. Brad Lager's lieutenant governor bid received another big donation -- $250,000 -- from TAMKO President and CEO David Humphreys, a Joplin businessman who was formerly one of Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder's biggest financial supporters. Lager is seeking to oust Kinder.