Roy Cooper, the leading Democrat running for the open U.S. Senate seat in North Carolina, raked in a record $3.4 million in donations in the first 24 hours after launching his campaign.
Cooper, a former two-term governor who has won six statewide races in North Carolina, announced he would run for the Senate on Monday morning. Cooper’s entering the race was widely seen as a win for Democrats as he was their first-choice recruit for what is likely to be one of the key races in 2026.
His campaign told Politico that it raised “more than $2.6 million raised directly to Cooper’s campaign account, with 95 percent of those donations totaling $100 or less, according to his team. The former governor raised another $900,000 into joint fundraising committees with the party, which allows for bigger contributions.”
As a sign of the times, Cooper’s first media interview after announcing his candidacy was with progressive podcaster Brian Tyler Cohen. He later made the rounds on more traditional media, with a primetime interview with Rachel Maddow.
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Cooper broke the Democratic Party’s record held by failed Kentucky candidate Amy McGrath in 2020, who brought in $2.5 million after launching her bid to unseat Sen. Mitch McConnell (R–KY).
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