Rick Perry: How to Run a Presidential Campaign When You're Low on Cash

Rick Perry ran out of money to pay his staff. But he says that doesn't matter.

“This is a long game, and I tell folks I’m in it to win,” Perry, the former Texas governor who is running for the Republican nomination, said after a town hall meeting in Anderson, South Carolina. “We'll be back on track.”

In a way, he might be right.

“We would welcome any involvement by the Super PACs to help us,” Jamie Johnson, Perry's senior director in Iowa, told ABC News. “And I think any campaign would say the same thing."

Austin Barbour, a Republican operative advising the pro-Perry groups, told ABC News that they have known since Perry’s low fundraising numbers became public last month that his groups would have to “diversify” their operations to pick up the slack -- and aimed to do “everything that we can that’s legal.”

That amounts to hiring staff in Iowa -- Barbour said he has two people in place already -- knocking on doors, calling voters, paying for advertisements -- and, in essence, carrying out the campaign Perry might run if he had the money.

But the Super PACs cannot hire Perry’s staff should they decide to stop working on a volunteer basis -- all except one have stayed on board, his campaign manager said Tuesday -- since federal regulations impose a 120-day cooling-off period on former staffers.

Arlette Saenz contributed reporting to this article.