Can super PAC support save cash-strapped Perry bid?

Former Texas Governor Rick Perry's campaign announced yesterday that it has stopped paying his campaign staffers. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

Austin, Texas (AP) — Rick Perry has raised so little money for his second-chance presidential bid that he's stopped paying his campaign staffers, the kind of cash crisis that could normally sink a candidate.

But the former Texas governor has well-funded super PACs that say they're ready to step in and keep his message afloat at least through Iowa, where Perry has spent more time than any other White House hopeful.

It's the latest sign of how influential outside groups — armed with small cadres of million-dollar donors — are reshaping presidential politics.

Perry raised only about $1 million in his first month of campaigning, a sum that isn't enough to cover his payroll. But a pair of pro-Perry outside groups, each with "Opportunity and Freedom" in its name, amassed almost $17 million over the same period.

Those groups, both super political action committees, are barred by federal rules from talking directly to the candidate they support.

But it became apparent recently to Austin Barbour, the Republican operative who leads them, how important their role would have to become. The groups began spending money not just on advertisements, but also on employees who can fill roles normally left to the traditional campaign.

They hired an Iowa director and deputy director, who now are building out a super PAC-run ground game in the state that weighs in first in the presidential nominating season. Barbour said he's prepared to hire staff in other early primary states, if necessary.

"We saw in the campaign finance reports that they didn't raise as much as anyone would have liked, and we knew what that meant — that they were going to have to go lean and mean while we would need to diversify what we were doing to help the governor," Barbour said. "We're building Perry's Iowa team. There's nothing in the playbook that says we can't do that as a super PAC."

Even with so much outside help, money problems plaguing Perry's campaign this early could leave future donors — as well as potential primary voters — wondering whether he can survive for the long haul in the crowded a GOP field.

"It's the deterioration of the campaign and there's no pretty face, no makeup you can put on it," said Bill Miller, a Texas-based GOP strategist. "It's like a NASCAR race. He's doesn't have the pole position and now he doesn't even have a full tank of gas."

Yet reports on Tuesday of Perry's money troubles prompted a longtime friend of the former governor to give the super PACs $100,000, Barbour said, declining to name the contributor.

Perry's official campaign is continuing as best it can, said Jeff Miller, his campaign manager. All but one staff member has agreed to continue working without pay, and Perry will be in South Carolina later this week before returning to Iowa next week, Miller said.

"Are we raising as much money as we'd like to? No. Are we still going to continue the governor's regular visits every week to early states? Yes," Miller said. "If you perform in these early states, how much money you raise doesn't matter."

Perry's not alone in relying heavily on super PACs. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal and former technology executive Carly Fiorina also are leaning on outside groups to build name recognition. Former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum's ex-campaign manager and two other staff members recently left his financially troubled campaign to form a super PAC supporting him.

In 2012, the support of a super PAC helped former House Speaker Newt Gingrich win South Carolina's primary and continue competing for the presidency after traditional campaign money dried up.

Word that Perry has stopped paying campaign staffers comes after he narrowly missed polling high enough to make the main event at last week's GOP debate, despite a rush of expensive national TV advertising that sought to boost his numbers and win him a place on stage.

Perry spokeswoman Lucy Nashed says he'll stay focused on competing in Iowa, as well as the subsequent primaries in New Hampshire and South Carolina.

His campaign's Iowa state chairman, Sam Clovis, said Tuesday he would continue working as a volunteer — and didn't know any Iowa campaign staffers who weren't following suit.

"I know everything there is to know about running a campaign with very little money," Clovis said.

Jamie Johnson, a Perry senior campaign director in Iowa, said he'd already "gotten an offer from another campaign — and I'm staying."

Donors can give $2,700 maximum per election to campaigns, but there are no limits on what they can give to super PACs. Dallas businessmen Kelcy Warren and Darwin Deason gave a total of $11 million to the super PACs backing Perry, even though Warren also serves as the finance chairman for Perry's official campaign.

The groups would have to wait 120 days to bring aboard anyone currently with the official Perry campaign. But Barbour said the groups have hired different people, while refusing to say how many are now on the super PAC payroll.

Opportunity and Freedom has spent more than $2 million so far on pro-Perry ads and will continue to provide such messaging.

Associated Press writer Catherine Lucey in Des Moines, Iowa, and Steve Peoples in Washington contributed to this report.

By Will Weissert and Julie Bykowicz, Associated Press. Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

The Gayly – August 11, 2015 @ 6pm.