Money is surging through the election battle between U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann and her Democratic challenger, Tarryl Clark, who reported totals on Wednesday that eclipse previous state fundraising records for a U.S. House race.
Clark, a state senator, said she had raised a whopping $910,000 since April in her effort to unseat Bachmann, the Stillwater Republican who has become a conservative favorite nationally.
Bachmann countered Clark's news with an even bigger bombshell: She had piled up $1.7 million in the same three-month period.
The tallies set a new high-water mark for Minnesota U.S. House races and offer further proof that the conservative-leaning Sixth District just north of the Twin Cities is the subject of immense national attention.
Bachmann's new numbers push her total fundraising over $4.1 million for this election cycle. That's more than any U.S. House candidate in Minnesota history has raised by the November election -- let alone by July.
Clark is also miles ahead of previous House challengers in Minnesota. In April she became the first non-incumbent House candidate in Minnesota to raise $1 million by the first filing period of the year. She is now the first to surpass $2 million by July.
The totals dwarf the fundraising pace of past hotly contested races in Minnesota. In July 2008, for example, then state Rep. Erik Paulsen had raised $1.4 million overall in his quest for the open seat west of the Twin Cities, compared with Ashwin Madia's $1 million haul.
"No matter which way you cut it, this is one of the most notable House races in the country," said Dave Levinthal, a spokesman for the Center for Responsive Politics, a Washington-based watchdog group that tracks campaign finance. "And it's one of the most expensive House races in the country. And that is not likely to change between now and November."