Top Dem donors can nab Annie Leibovitz photo with Biden, Obama, Bill Clinton for a steep, six-figure price
Wealthy Democratic donors will be able to score a rare photo Thursday with President Biden and former Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama — snapped by renowned celebrity shutterbug Annie Leibovitz — if they reportedly pay as much as six figures for the honor.
Biden’s re-election campaign is hosting a fundraiser at Radio City Music Hall to grow the Democrat’s already sizable cash advantage over former President Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee.
The hat-passing event will include “a star studded program hosted by Mindy Kaling and featuring musical guests Queen Latifah, Lizzo, Ben Platt, Cynthia Erivo, and Lea Michelle,” according to the Biden campaign.
The rally “will be kicked off by first lady Jill Biden, and culminate with the main event of an armchair conversation with the three presidents, moderated by none other than [CBS] Late Night’s Stephen Colbert.”
An afterparty will be hosted by Jill Biden and DJ D-Nice.
Multiple news outlets, including the Daily Mail and the Washington Times, reported Tuesday that donors who ponied up $100,000 would get a photo by Leibovitz.
But the Biden campaign told The Post late Tuesday that the photo shoot wasn’t operating prix fixe.
A Biden campaign aide said that there was no particular rate for the snaps with the three presidents. Another said “some of the top supporters will get portraits from Annie” without offering a price tag or range.
According to reports by the Mail and Times, donors of the Thursday event at the $250,000 and $500,000 levels will be able to attend separate receptions with the three presidents.
There additionally will be a “grassroots virtual conversation with the three presidents moderated by Biden-Harris Campaign Manager Julie Chavez Rodriguez,” the Biden campaign said.
Event organizers include campaign co-chairman Jeffrey Katzenberg and Vogue editor-in-chief Anna Wintour.
Biden, 81, has built a large financial edge over Trump, 77, despite lagging in recent polls.
The incumbent’s campaign had $155 million cash on hand as of this month — after Biden raised $53 million in a nationwide fundraising blitz over the past month.
As of late January, Trump had $36.6 million in campaign cash on hand.
Trump leads in national polling by an average of 1.6%, according to the RealClearPolitics average of recent surveys.
The 45th president also is ahead of his successor in several key battleground states, including Arizona, Georgia, Michigan and North Carolina.