Mitt Romney rakes in $4.6 million just 24 hours after 'Obamacare' ruling

Conservative donors took to the Internet as soon as the Supreme Court upheld President Obama's health-care reform law. That's good for Mitt Romney's bottom line – and for his small-donor base.

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Charles Dharapak/AP
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney responds to the Supreme Court's health-care ruling on Thursday, outside the Capitol in Washington.

(Updated at 11:08 EDT Friday, June 29.)

Mitt Romney could win from losing. Conservatives are hopping mad over the US Supreme Court’s ruling upholding the Affordable Care Act, and they’re flooding the Republican presidential candidate’s campaign coffers with cash.

In the 24 hours since the court handed down its decision Thursday, the Romney campaign took in $4.6 million from more than 47,000 donations online, according to campaign spokesman Andrea Saul, who tweeted the news at 10:20 Friday morning.

At 5:23 Friday morning, the post-decision “take” was already at $4.2 million and more than 42,000 donors, Ms. Saul reported in an earlier tweet.

Within hours of the ruling, the Romney campaign sent out a fundraising e-mail. “Today, the Supreme Court upheld Obamacare. But regardless of what the court said about the constitutionality of the law, Obamacare is bad medicine, it is bad policy, and when I’m president, the bad news of Obamacare will be over,” the e-mail read.

It concluded with the ask: "Donate $10 or more to put a stop to the policies of Barack Obama and the liberal Democrats."

For Mr. Romney, just as important as the cash are the new donors – not only because of their money but because they are potential volunteers. In particular, Romney has struggled to attract small donations. As of the end of May, only 11 percent of his money had come from donors who gave $200 or less, compared with 41 percent for President Obama, according to the Campaign Finance Institute (CFI) in Washington.

Still, the cash is nice. Romney had a good fundraising month in May, but Obama’s was better, according to the CFI.  

“Romney’s $23.4 million in receipts doubled his campaign’s $11.7 million of the previous month,” the institute reports. “But Obama’s $39.8 million was 70 percent higher than Romney’s.”

The Obama campaign has not advertised fundraising numbers since the court announced it was upholding health-care reform.

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