The Indian-American community, having the highest per capita income among the ethnic communities in the US, appears to have opened up its wallet for the Obama Campaign, but its contribution is far less than that of 2008.
The Mitt Romney campaign, which last week at Republican National Convention wooed the community by inviting a record number of Indian-Americans to address the event, does not appear to have been successful in getting a pie into the Indian-American money bag, the list of major Romney donors available from open source documents indicate.
Florida-based Dr Akshay Desai appears to be the only Indian-American to have raised more than USD 1 million for the Romney campaign, which unlike the Obama Campaign, has remained very secretive in revealing the list of its major donors.
Desai has been named as Romney’s “stars and stripes” — the small group of top fund-raisers for the campaign.
He is also the only Indian-American serving on the Romney national finance team. In fact, he was also a Romney bundler (major fund raiser) in his previous presidential bid in 2008.
“Republican Party donor base at all levels is very motivated and energised. I am very confident that we will out raise President Obama in the month of August and every month leading up to the November election. We will match and surpass President Obama’s goal to have raised $1 billion. We are confident that we will have resources to get our voice out to the public and win the election on the strength of our ideas,” Desai told PTI.
If Desai is the only major Indian-American donor for the Romney campaign, the list of bundlers made public by the Obama campaign names nearly half a dozen who have raised between half-a-million to one million US dollars.
Major Indian-American bundlers as released by the Obama Campaign are Rajiv Fernando (Chicago), Shefali Razdan Duggal (San Francisco), Reshma Saujani (New York), Raj Goyle (New York), Kamil Hasan (Saratoga in California) and Ajita Razi (California).
Eminent Indian-American author and physician Dr Deepak Chopra has raised between $100,000 and $200,000 for the Obama campaign, so does Kavita Tankha (Los Altos Hills in California) and Girish Reddy (Jersey City in New Jersey).
Among other major Indian-American donors are Maneesh Goyal (New York), Anu Duggal (New York), Didi Saluja (New York), Amy K. Singh (Illinois) and Shelly Kapoor Collins.