Monday, July 20, 2009

Publicly funded campaigns: How to buy a mayor for the City of Miami? ... by gimleteye

Normally the concept of publicly funded campaigns is that a pool of money is created from taxpayer dollars, like a blind trust, that candidates for public office can access if they pledge not to raise money from private corporations or individuals. In the abnormal form of publicly funded elections, the City of Miami stands out. The deal that puts taxpayers in the way of $2.4 billion for the new Marlins stadium has spawned a whole chain reaction of campaign contributions to mayoral candidate, Joe Sanchez. Credit Stephen Murray with the research (building on Genius's research posted on the 16th). So, it is necessary to broaden the definition of publicly funded campaigns to include elected officials like Sanchez who pitched decisions that benefit a single special interest that put local taxpayers in the position of catcher.

Most money raised for local political campaigns comes from individuals or corporations that do business with government. Real estate and development interests that depend on zoning, permits, or subsidies are top of the list throughout the state of Florida. In a perverse way, the Marlins' stadium deal is only one example of how we already publicly fund campaigns through the backdoor. Here is another example: Jorge Perez gives plentifully to local political races, depending on who voted for zoning for his multi-thousand unit projects. When Perez' billion dollar empire goes belly up and his debt is taken over by banks that are solvent by the grace of US taxpayers, doesn't that make candidates he has contributed to, publicly funded?

This leads to an understanding of the fallacy of the "green shoots" economic recovery the media is searching for with a magnifying glass and figurative tweezers: construction and development interests, who drove Florida's economy based on population growth and "expansion of tax base", are now wards of the state. That's also why Florida Hometown Democracy is so threatening to the building trade associations and the Chamber of Commerce: once voters start taking back from local elected officials the terrible decisions that turned Florida into a concrete jungle, there is no telling where their uppity behavior may stop.


30 comments:

Anonymous said...

Is it better to get the contribution after the fact like the Marlin's to Sanchez or before the fact like some of the others?

Anonymous said...

Everyone has to stop Sanchez from winning this election. Go out and VOTE please!
Although Regalado has more money, Regalado did not vote over 50 times to put High Rise buildings in neighborhoods. Regalado voted against Jorge Perez Mercy towers project.
I dont know what will happen to the city if Joe wins. Manny led a PR machine to let everyone outside of Miami know how great he is. Meanwhile the city was about to have an explosion. Now its starting to come through and the next mayor has a HUGE problem. We need someone who understands that people cannot pay more taxes and that we need to have bureaucracy cut in the city.

Anonymous said...

Yes! Everyone must vote for Regalado. He will cut the bureaucracy which is why all four unions support him, he will make sure to cut their pensions too. And even though Regalado has more money, it is only from good developers who want to build parks and playgrounds for children, not mean developers who want to build evil highrises. God help us all if Regalado does not win.

Anonymous said...

Joe Sanchez
Marlins Stadium and Major League Baseball (MLB):
Irwin Raij: MLB’s counsel - $500
John McHale: Executive Vice President & Chief Information Officer for MLB - $300
Jimmie Lee Solomon: Executive Vice President, Baseball Operations MLB - $500
Robert Manfred Jr.: Executive Vice President, Labor Relations & Human Resources, MLB - $500
Robert A. Dupoy: President & Chief Operating Officer MLB - $500
Thomas Ostertag: Senior vice president and general counsel for MLB - $500
David Samson: President of the Marlins - $500
Cindi Samson: Wife of David - $500
Michael Hill: Manager of Florida Marlins - $500
Peter Loyello: Spokesman Florida Marlins - $500
Sean Flynn: Vice President of Marketing for the Florida Marlins - $500
Claude Delorme: Senior Vice President, Stadium Development at Florida Marlins - $500
Wayne Katz: Attorney in NYC, represented Marlins in negotiations for a new stadium - $500
Jeffrey Loria: Owner of Florida Marlins - $500
Julie Loria: Wife of Jeffrey Loria - $500
Keli Zaloudek: Executive Assistant of Jeffrey Loria - $500
Maxwell Davidson: NY art dealer, probably connected to Jeffrey Loria - $500
Michael Steinhardt: Famous American investor, friend of Loria - $500
Judy Steinhardt: Wife of Michael - $500
Other Developers / Real Estate:
13 LPs/LLCs owned by Corporate Creations Network located at 121 Alhambra Place #1100 - $5300
Citisquare Group - a developer with 9 subsidiaries - $4500
7 Listings under 169 East Flagler Street #1600 - $3500
PH Hotel Inc, Heagrand inc, PH Retail, DoubleGrand Bar Inc, Julie Gnmes, Fla. Intl Realty Svs - $2770
RJF Family Trust, 3 others located at 1877 S Miami Ave - $2000
The Mael Family (all listed living in NY) - $2000
Law offices of Solowsky & Allen PA - $2000
Namin Construction - $2000
Goldman Properties (Under multiple LLCs at 804 Ocean Dr) - $2000
3 Telecom Companies located at 2620 SW 27th Ave - $1500
The Related Group - at least 2 - $1000
Santa Clara Apts Ltd, affordable housing project; received Govt. grants headed by former County Mgr. Joaquin Avino - $500
Foley & Lardner LLP PAC - law firm that does real estate law - $500
Baker Construction Company, doing an addition to Miami Intl Airport - $500
PBSJ Corporation PAC, a political action committee for a construction company - $250

Anonymous said...

Tomás Regalado
Brown Development - $7500
Norman Braman, 11 car companies - $6000
Nifah and Partners, engineering company, not 100% sure on connections- $6000
Emil Porto, real estate - $5000
Canepari Family, Real estate developers Gatehouse Group- $4500
Munilla Family, construction - $4500
Little Bongo LLC and other ‘Farm’ properties - $3000+
Rodolfo Rodriguez, Miami Latin TV and other companies - $3000
Jilk Investment and others - $3000
Maurice Weiner & HMG Advisory Corp (1870 S Bayshore Drive) - $2500
First Commercial (7900 NW 155th St) - $2500
Paul Dudley, owner of Linden Airport NJ - $2500
Carlisle Development Group LLC (2950 SW 27 Ave) - $2500+
Vazquez Family (CEM Management and More) - $2450
Sandra Holdings and World Waste and others- $2200
Estrella Family, insurance industry - $2000
Gibraltar Miami LLC - $2000
Gary Gerson, development firms - $2000+
Gardner, real estate - $2000
MacDuff America Inc, insurance company and two underwriters - $2000
Vazquez Family, Meat Packing Companies - $2000
Charles De Lucca, other golf related industry - $2000
Commodore Plaza Parking LLC and owners - $2000
Leyva Family, Continental Electric Co (6950 NW 77 Ct.) - $2000
Fashion Outlets Inc - $2000
Negrin Family - $1900
Rickenbaker Marina, President, Manager and wife, and Founder - $1700
Brickell Commerce Plaza - $1500
Solowsky and Allen, law office – $1500
Perricone Marketplace - $1500
Gutierrez Properties Inc, property management - $1500
Zitro Inc (8105 W 20 Ave), electric company - $1500
948 Holdings and others - $1500
O.J.J Nursery, landscaping - $1500
Chavez S. Florida Interiors, construction - $1500
Half-Circle Property and others, property management - $1500
Samuel Oliver 2 max contributions in 1 cal yr., Pittman Lawgroup, City of Miami listed as client - $1500
Richard & Louise Allen, attorneys - $1000
Hodica Security/Parking -$1000
B.C. Property Holdings, 4500 Holding (4500 Biscayne Ave) - $1000
Coral East Development and others (10 NW 42 Ave) - $1000
Fasto Alvarez and Assoc (2828 Coral Way) - $1000+
Casablanca Seafood Grill / Fish Market - $1000
Wolfson Family, affordable housing - $1000
Priequez Family, consultant - $1000
Law Enforcement Systems, Long Island NY - $1000
Abamart Corporation - $1000
Rachman Family, insurance - $1000
LFLP Holdings and Cargil Int Corp, import/export - $1000
Happy Homes, insurance adjusters - $1000
Palm Bay Studios, real estate owned by Ehrlich - $1000
Law office of Joseph Carballo - $1000
China Hardware (720 NW 27 Ave) - $1000
Beuchamp Construction Company - $1000
Law office of Alex Hanna - $1000
Environmental Site Assessments, Storm and Land cleanup - $1000
Key West Harbor LLC (2640 S Bayshore Dr) - $1000
Gonzalez Family, ‘executives’ - $1000
Wildfire Amusements and Winners Circle - $1000
Miami Fraternal Order of Police - $500
The Holtzman Group, political consultants - $500
Becker and Poliakoff PA, lobbyists - $500
Epic West Condo LLC (701 Brickell Ave) - $500
Fraternal Order of Police Jacksonville - $500
Miami Police Hispanic Officers Union - $500
Double Entries or 2/3 Max Contributions (Under Investigation): Bernard Wolfson - $1000
Onier Llopiz – $1000
Skip Braver - $1000
Cigarette Racing Team - $1500
Javier Arritola - $1000
Samuel Oliver (04/28/09 #172 and 06/29/09 #757) - $1000

Anonymous said...

Wow the Regalado koolaid drinking machine is out in force...

Geniusofdespair said...

This might be the most examined campaign reports in history. How about some of you looking a Joe Carollo's brother? That also could be interesting.

Anonymous said...

or Francis Suarez, or Spence-Jones, or....

Anonymous said...

...or Commissioner Sarnoff.

Anonymous said...

Please review the lists of those folks and companies supporting the Mayoral Candidates Joe Sanchez and Tomas Regalado. Each list is most informative and enlightening. All registered voters that are not pleased with the direction that Miami has taken for the past 8 years should care greatly about the differences between the two lists and therefore the differences between the two candidates. You can tell a good deal about a person’s character and personality by the company that they keep. Look at both lists of supporters. Which list would you be proud to be associated with? Which list cares more about our community, its people and its future? Which list do you trust more? Which list is made up of individuals and companies that are more like you? That list will help you select the best candidate for Mayor to lead Miami into a better future and one we can all be proud of.
Harry Emilio Gottlieb

Anonymous said...

unfortunately there is nothing we can do - we have been and will forever be dominated, controlled and ruled by the wealthy powerbrokers that do what they want. You're screwed and then you die - that's politics in Miami

Anonymous said...

I am with Harry. I proudly stand alongside the list of attorneys, developers, and lobbyists that are just like me, and support Tomas Regalado.

Gifted said...

I think money means less and less on Regalado's camp. It's becoming a band wagon thing. Which is good for us, Tigers don't change stripes. Regalado has been consistent. He has not done everything good but at least we know he will not change.

Meanwhile other people are late to the party and like to dress up in sheeps clothing and point fingers.

Anonymous said...

Money means nothing to Regalado. He is worth only $5,000 after all. And he is consistent except when he has to change positions.

Forget the Sheeps, I am with the Tigers.

Anonymous said...

wow... the koolaid comment was right... these comments are full of people getting disillusioned with so much koolaid.. lay off the punch, it's gonna make us go broke...

Anonymous said...

What will make us go broke is overpaying pencil pushing firemen. Who knew assistant chiefs were making $375,000 per year? While they worked three day weeks. Then there is the overtime.

The unions have completely gone gaga with all the money they are taking from the taxpayers.

Anonymous said...

Vote for Regalado? He can't even defend his own record: at the GMCC debate, Sanchez said he could not comment on Regalado's greatest achievement or failure because Regalado has not done anything. Regalado's best comeback was that he had created some neighborhood committee. Created a committee?! Is that it?! Seriously, man, I agreed with your no votes and the Miami River and Mercy, but you have to be FOR something! You showed your true colors by sitting on your tush for more than a decade. And the other commenters are right, you'll never change. You try to tell voters you'll SAVE them money? You don't want to touch the City's biggest drain -- union contracts -- while Sanchez understands we all have to take a cut in these hard times. That's a brave stand.

Anonymous said...

Yet Sanchez greatest achievement was a park building.
His second greatest would have been Mercy Tower and the Marlins Stadium.
I live in his district, so I have a bit more knowledge on this.
He has fixed more sidewalk and potholes then any Commissioner ever.
He was instrumental in Bryant Park and Robert King High park.
He donated 300,000 from his fund to the Shenandoah pool.
He has been the only Commissioner in the City Commission to always be under budget in his office's budget.
Also in that same budget he donates for food to the elderly homes.
He has the Community means once every week around his district.
Issuing the task force for Graffiti. Creating after school cares in Shenandoah park.
These are things "that lack vision" however I like the small stuff. I am sorry that my district is not as nice as the roads. We need to get back the basics. Not just big buildings, whats the point of you driving to the arsht center if you blow your tire on the way?

And further more Sanchez has NEVER voted against the Unions. He was a former union vice president.
Regalado has voted against them. Regalado has said he will renegotiate pensions, cut administrative positions, and lower his salary as Mayor.

Meanwhile in the Miami Chamber of Commerce debate Sanchez said that he is open to raise Taxes.

Brave stand my ass....

Anonymous said...

I would rather someone who says no, then someone who says yes all the time. Especially if he chocks it up to progress.

Anonymous said...

I would rather someone who says no, then someone who says yes all the time. Especially if he chocks it up to progress.

Anonymous said...

Yes, I like no more than I like yes, all the time. Imagine if everyone said yes, there would be no no.

Forget the sheeps, I want to be with the tigers, at least a tiger never hurt no one.

Anonymous said...

Why do you think the unions went with Regalado? BECAUSE HE TOLD THEM WHAT THEY WANTED TO HEAR..those decisions are made by the directors of the unions who care only about their fat salaries and don't want to see them diminish with a pension renegotiation...Sanchez told them the truth, but they were too busy drinking Tommy's Koolaid...oh, well

Anonymous said...

Unions went with Regalado because he has more money, higher polling, wants to get rid of the police chief, fought for the Fire Fighters and Miami Police to be in the stadium and I dunno....maybe because he is the front runner and unions like lobbyist's want to be with the winner.

Just like lobbyist gave to both of them!
And Sanchez was a former Union VP and now works for the Micosukee. He has never voted against Union (Regalado has)
Jesus some people here are dense!

Geniusofdespair said...

No people are dense, we have the campaign workers posting comments. Can't you tell?

Maria Perez-Alva said...

I disagree that it is a matter of being dense.

Tomas holds himself out to be the candidate of "the people" who is "worth $5,000," will "clean City Hall," and "cares about neighborhoods."

So it raises some eyebrows when you raise more money than your opponent (whom you accuse of being in bed with special interests), when you are supported by unions whose only job is to protect their exorbitant taxpayer salaries, and the same developers and lobbyists who you accuse of destroying neighborhoods all give to your campaign.

Not dense at all, just pointing out the walking contradiction that is soon to be our Mayor.

Anonymous said...

It starts with polling....Regalado was up. Some of the lobbyist tell some others Regalado is up. Better give a $250 dollar check. Money starts rising up and before you know it, its a snowball.

Look at Regalado's first campaign reports a good amount are $5-100 dollar checks.

Anonymous said...

The $5 and $10 checks are from actual supporters who live in Miami. In fact, they are voters.

MiamiComplaints said...

Regalado has helped me when I call him and Joe Sanchez doesnot even show up when you set up an appointment with him. Joe Sanchez doesnot return your calls or letters. He is a waste of time and money for the City of Miami. He should drop out of the Mayor's race and should resign as Commissioner of District 3.

Anonymous said...

I have know Mr. Sanchez since elementary school. Recently ran into him and felt compelled to get a few answers as to why our city has lost a huge number of residents? And why more was not done to syphone construction.

I felt very comfortable with him after all he has been appointed to look after the best interest of Miami residents.

He's response was hostile and he's arrogant position was confusing. I clearly understand now. Mr. Sanchez is running for mayor for his own egotistical need.

Who needs him! Unless of course we want to make sure that we reward him prior to further damaging our city.

Anonymous said...

I have known Mr. Sanchez since elementary school. Recently ran into him and asked him a few questions about why more was not done to hault our massive condo building? And what of the number of residents leaving Miami?

He's response was outright nasty! He denied the massive exodus of residents and dismissed Miami's housing surplus. If I clearly remember elected officials are to look out for the community's best interest. Also they are catalogued as public servants.

He's arrogance exudes his confidence. I am completely clear as to his interest in running for mayor.

He's ego and pockets!