Washington – The dog days of summer could be crucial to Sen. Amy Klobuchar's presidential hopes.
Polling consistently in the low single digits, far behind the leaders, the Minnesota senator has taken out a slew of Facebook ads and dispatched hometown supporters across the Twin Cities pleading for small dollar contributions to reach a minimum threshold of individual donors to qualify for the critical third round of debates in September.
The Democratic National Committee has given candidates until Aug. 28 to meet its fundraising and polling criteria for the Sept. 12-13 debate in Houston. To be included, candidates must reach at least 2% support in at least four national or early primary state polls from the end of June to the end of August. And they must amass at least 130,000 individual campaign donors.
To date, Klobuchar's campaign has not hit either mark.
"We're within striking distance," said Justin Buoen, Klobuchar's campaign manager. "I'm incredibly confident we're going to get there well in advance of the deadline."
Five rivals, generally seen as the contest's front-runners, appear to have already qualified: Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Kamala Harris and Pete Buttigieg. Klobuchar could be on track to reach the polling requirement soon. She has tallied 2% in three polls since June 28. But in a new NBC/Wall Street Journal national poll out Friday, Klobuchar registered at only 1%, trailing entrepreneur Andrew Yang and former Texas congressman Beto O'Rourke. Worse, a new Fox poll in South Carolina had her at less than 1%, behind Yang, former Maryland congressman John Delaney and New Age author Marianne Williamson, who each registered at least a single digit.
Klobuchar's campaign won't say how close she is to reaching 130,000 donors. But her fundraising message in recent weeks has increasingly pivoted toward achieving that goal."We need 130,000 unique donors to qualify for the DNC's fall debates, and we must hit this goal to stay on pace. Donate $2 now and we'll send you a free bumper sticker," reads a Klobuchar fundraising solicitation that has been popping up as sponsored content in Facebook and Instagram feeds.
Political analysts say that in order to make the all-important cut and stay on the debate stage, marginal candidates like Klobuchar are being forced to spend money on online ads targeting large numbers of small-dollar donors, rather than building broad support among voters.