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This story was updated at 4:15 p.m. with further details and again at 10:20 p.m. with information from Scott Milne's late report.
In the homestretch before the August 11 primary, Rebecca Holcombe raised more money in the last month than her rivals for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, according to reports filed Saturday with the Secretary of State's Office.
Holcombe pulled in $64,913 between July 1 and August 1, edging out Lt. Gov. David Zuckerman, who collected $60,229 during the same final reporting period before the primary.
The result puts the former education secretary back to the front of the fundraising class, following Zuckerman’s strong performance in the last reporting period. At that point in the race, between March 13 and the end of June, Zuckerman had hit his stride and was far out-raising Holcombe, reporting $101,276 more than her during the period.
The late surge by Holcombe, who entered the Democratic primary six months before Zuckerman, extends her total fundraising lead over the lieutenant governor. To date, she has raised $546,278 to his $349,047, according to the latest filings. That includes $27,541 in donations from herself or family, including a $10,512 payment that she made last month to a political consultant for research services.
Last period, political newcomer Molly Gray, an assistant attorney general, led the field. But last month she dropped to second place with $22,134 raised.
She reported 265 total donors during the month.
Gray still holds a commanding financial lead in the race, however, with $213,680 to Ashe’s $109,031 raised to date.
Both remain well ahead of the other two other candidates seeking the Democratic nomination. Sen. Debbie Ingram (D-Chittenden) reported an additional $22,111, bringing her to $68,723 raised to date. She loaned herself $18,080 last month and has contributed $48,765 to date.
Activist Brenda Siegel reported another $17,702 in contributions for a total of $64,099 raised so far.
On the GOP side of the race, Scott Milne, a former Republican nominee for governor and U.S. Senate, reported significantly more than his rivals — $41,085 for July, bringing his total to date to $46,382. He reported 139 contributors, including the $10,016 he paid himself for mail and research expenses.
Milne reported after the deadline — and after the initial version of this story was filed on Sunday due to what his campaign said was a problem with the Secretary of State's Office website.
Republican Meg Hansen reported 71 donations totaling $10,814. She reported raising $36,764 to date, including $6,500 from herself this period.
Dana Frank Colson reported two donations totaling $55 and $1,570 raised to date. Former Milton representative Don Turner reported no contributions in the period, just some modest expenditures from a campaign mostly funded with his own $4,000 contribution.
Two other Republican candidates, Dwayne Tucker and Jim Hogue, did not file by the deadline, according to the Secretary of State's website.
Disclosure: Tim Ashe is the domestic partner of Seven Days publisher and coeditor Paula Routly. Find our conflict-of-interest policy at sevendaysvt.com/disclosure.
Tags: Phil Scott, David Zuckerman, Rebecca Holcombe, Tim Ashe, Molly Gray, campaign finance, Web Only, Image
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