Romney spends heavily in a challenging month

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WASHINGTON (MCT) — Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney and a “super PAC” working on his behalf spent more than twice as much as they raised in January, underscoring how persistent challenges by rivals Newt Gingrich and Rick Santorum have taxed the former Massachusetts governor’s financial operation.

In a month when Romney lost two of the four GOP primary contests, his campaign raced through $18.7 million while raising just $6.4 million, according to finance records filed Monday with the Federal Election Commission. Restore Our Future, a super PAC run by his former aides, spent nearly $14 million, more than twice the $6.6 million it raised.

The high burn rate highlighted how heavily Romney is relying on his super PAC — which is not allowed to coordinate with his campaign — as he tries to convince reluctant Republican voters that he can beat President Barack Obama.

Obama, meanwhile, raised $29 million in January for his re-election and the Democratic National Committee, including $11.8 million for his campaign. Priorities USA Action, a super PAC backing Obama’s re-election, raised less than $59,000 in January. That paltry sum explains why Obama decided to reverse his stance on outside spending earlier this month and encourage his donors to support the super PAC.

Romney remains the undisputed leader in the GOP money race. Heading into February, a month in which he has been aggressively fundraising, Romney had $7.7 million on hand, while his super PAC had $16.3 million in reserves.

Meanwhile, Gingrich had $1.8 million on hand after raising $5.5 million in January. Rep. Ron Paul of Texas had $1.6 million after bringing in $4.5 million. And Santorum, who also attracted $4.5 million, had $1.5 million remaining.

All three have been lifted by allied super PACs infused with money from wealthy benefactors.

Winning Our Future, a pro-Gingrich super PAC, raised $11 million — with $10 million of that coming from Las Vegas Sands Chief Executive Sheldon Adelson and his wife, Miriam.

More than 70 percent of the $2.3 million raised in January by Endorse Liberty, one of three super PACs supporting Paul, came from one man: Peter Thiel, a San Francisco-based investor and the founder of online payment service PayPal. Thiel, who gave the group $900,000 in 2011, anted up another $1.7 million last month.

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