WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden 's reelection campaign and the Democratic National Committee announced Tuesday that they'd raised $264 million in the year's second quarter, an impressive haul that may help them calm fears within their own party about last week's shaky debate performance.
The total includes $127 million collected during June alone, when the campaign says it took in more than $33 million on the day of the debate and in its aftermath. Biden also has $240 million in cash on hand, outpacing the $212 million it reported having last month.
Hours later, the campaign of former President Donald Trump, who is set to accept the Republican presidential nomination at the party's convention this month in Milwaukee, announced an even more robust $331 million for the second quarter.
That outpaced Biden in the three-month period, though Biden's campaign noted that the $127 million it took in for June edged the Republican's $111.8 million haul for the month.
Biden campaign manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez called her side's totals ''a testament to the committed and growing base of supporters standing firmly behind the president.''
The announced totals come as Biden's campaign continues to scramble to quell panic among some Democrats, who have questioned whether the president can win November's election after a debate where he appeared raspy, trailed off and at times gave convoluted answers. Some of the campaign's top leaders have held multiple calls since the debate, preaching patience to donors and top surrogates.
Campaign officials nonetheless insist there's been no discussion ''whatsoever'' of Biden exiting the race nor of any staff shakeups.
Biden enjoyed a large fundraising advantage over Trump in the early stages of the race, but the former president has narrowed the gap more recently.