Contributions of the Day

By Erica C. Barnett, Tuesday, September 29, 2009 at 11:31 AM
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Mike McGinn

Mike McGinn

Contributions continue to pour in for mayoral candidates Mike McGinn and Joe Mallahan, and the contributor lists are stacking up pretty much as you’d expect them to.

In McGinn’s corner: Environmental groups, neighborhood activists

In Mallahan’s: Law and order organizations, labor unions (which don’t like McGinn because he opposes the waterfront tunnel, which would mean lots of union jobs), and members of what passes for the conservative establishment in Seattle.

Among the notable contributors Mallahan has reported in the last two days:

$700 from the Seattle Police Management Association, which represents police lieutenants and captains;

$700 from the national branch of the Amalgamated Transit Union, whose local, ATU 587, represents Metro drivers;

$700 from the King County Labor Council;

$500 from Ron Crockett, president of the Emerald Downs race track in Auburn; and

$700 from Suzie Burke, a Fremont developer and longtime bike-lane opponent who also gave $800 to Susan Hutchison, a conservative candidate for King County Executive.

On McGinn’s list:

$50 (of $100 total) from Vafa Ghazi, a Fremont neighborhood activist who has since moved to Germany;

$350 (of $400 total) from unsuccessful legislative candidate and latte-tax proponent John Burbank;

$500 from Chuck Ayers, head of the Cascade Bicycle Club;

$600 (of $700 total) from Cascade policy director David Hiller;

$200 (of $250 total) from former city council member Heidi Wills; and

$700 from Cleanscapes, a local trash-collection company.

The overall takeaway: In the past two days, McGinn has reported more overall contributions than Mallahan ($15,978 to Mallahan’s $12,180). More significant than the total, however, is the fact that McGinn reported nearly three times as many individual contributors as Mallahan—84 in the last two days to Mallahan’s 33.

Mallahan continues to raise much more of his money than McGinn from out of town, as well: $119,049, compared to McGinn’s $34,163.

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  • Uh, Lisa, unless I'm not detecting some fairly subtle sarcasm... you might want to re-read the last sentence of this post.

    Mallahan continues to raise much more of his money than McGinn from out of town, as well: $119,049, compared to McGinn’s $34,163.


    I'll translate: Mike McGinn has also accepted thousands of dollars from donors outside of Seattle. So if Mallahan is a villain for taking outside donations, then so is McGinn.

    This sort thing is actually fairly common at the higher civic levels.
  • Lisa
    Mallahan taking money from those living outside of Seattle?

    That's a bitch move, Joe. One that looks terrible for you.
  • Quincy
    The awesomeness of that McGinn photo just goes on and on. Speaking of, what's up with guys who think slacks + button-down shirt + tie + sportcoat + clod-hoppers = dressed up?
  • So one has to wonder why Murakami, Suzie Burke and others are donating to Mallahan. What interests do they think he's going to protect? Same for all his other donors, and likewise, what do McGinn's donors think they're going to get from him?

    I don't think the answers are cut and dry enough to label or disqualify either candidate via simplistic guilt by association.
  • Something's in the Air
    You might look behind the contributions a bit. I see in the McGinn camp some very credible people signing on for some significant dollars, and hosting the sustainability fundraiser coming up. I think the substance over form is really starting to show.
  • Guest
    I take back my word choice of "neighborhood supporter." In it's place I insert: normal voters and taxpayers who live Seattle and who are not members of the Downtown Seattle Association or the Greater Seattle Chamber of Commerce.
  • sarah68
    An example of neighborhood supporter could be a homeowner in Laurelhurst not wanting Children's Hospital (the only major charity hospital for kids in a 5-state region) to expand because it might get a little noisy and there'd be a little more traffic, and they live in Laurelhurst where that just shouldn't happen.

    That's a neighborhood supporter. Seattle has gotten past the point where it can afford those neighborhood supporters.
  • hmmmm
    Ultimately, there is no agreeed upon definition of "pro neighborhood". You could be for leveling houses for shitty condos, or vice versa, and the label still applies. It is meaningless.
  • Nimitz Freeway
    I am a little suspicious of using "neighborhood supporter" or not as a litmus test.

    The term could also be a euphemism for NIMBYism, BANANAism, and other "i've got mine, screw you younger and less wealthy people" attitudes you can see among a certain set in Seattle.

    Seems to me some self-identified "neighborhood supporters" are against backyard cottages, for example.
  • Guest
    Pat Murakami donated to Mallahan? I thought she moved to Bangladore.
  • Chris Stefan
    @11
    I don't think Cascade Bicycle Club donated to Mallahan ...
  • TValley
    Cascade Bicycle Club *and* Suzie Burke? Qua? What is his bicycle plan, exactly?
  • Gidge
    @3&5--don't forget Pat Murakami. Not as big of a donor, but equally bad news.
  • Guest
    Neighborhood supporter is someone who cares about smaller issues that have a big impact on normal people (who are also taxpayers and voters). Examples of things that neighborhood supporters care about: sidewalks, crosswalks, healthy neighborhood business districts, neighborhood schools, neighborhood parks, having a diversity of housing and affordable housing in a neighborhood, crime prevention, building a healthy sense community in a neighborhood.
  • dacoach
    so endorsing a candidate has moved from being for him/her in an election to being an outrigth media mouthpiece for him/her.

    shocked, but i shouldn't be.
  • Hobgoblin
    @6 - I love tired political labels.

    I'm not defending Suzie Burke at all, but what is a "neighborhood supporter?" Is it like the local equivalent of a states-rights advocate vs. a Federalist? Is Wallingford to South Carolina as the City of Seattle is to the U.S. Government or something? Are there anti-neighborhood activists who are actually opposed to the concept of citizens living in a geographically defined community within a larger city?
  • Guest
    I am with Stacy on this. Suzie Burke is not a neighborhood (unless it relates to her investments in Fremont), pedestrian or bicycling supporter. And, she gave Mallahan $700.
  • Chris Stefan
    @3
    Don't forget John Stanton and Martin Selig have also donated money to Mallahan.

    Those three are some of the usual suspects in the area when it comes to funding conservative canidates, conservative ballot measures, or opposing transit and building roads.
  • SeaMariner1
    Oh Stacy. That's such an insincere statement I can't believe you are trying to pretend otherwise.
  • Stacy
    Suzie Burke donating to Mallahan is more than enough for me to vote against him.
  • Chris Stefan
    Kind of odd ATU is supporting Mallahan, McGinn is the one who has been in favor of increasing transit service and having the city make it easier on buses (signal priority, bus bulbs, transit lanes). Mallahan wants to stop the streetcars.

    More fundamentally McGinn is a transit user while Mallahan drives the 6 blocks to his campaign office.
  • Voter
    By out of town do you mean Bellevue,

    as in the auto driving Bellevue-residing owners of law firms and real estate and engineering and other businesses located in downtown Seattle?

    Hey that's a good story idea, how many of the donors of each one are actually auto commuters whose "heads" we are taxing!
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