More than $11.5 million was raised in the Democratic
primary campaign for Philadelphia mayor this year by groups that by law were
not allowed to coordinate with any of the candidates.
And that number may climb, since one of the so-called
independent expenditure groups, Leadership Matters, did not file the campaign
finance report that was due Thursday.
The new reports show how much money candidates and
political action committees raised in the two weeks before and after the May 19
primary.
Added to previous reports, Thursday's numbers make clear
that the outside spending overwhelmingly overshadowed the fund-raising of the
six Democrats in the race for mayor.
The biggest spender by far was American Cities, launched
by a group of Main Line investment firm owners who put up almost all of the
$7.5 million raised to support State Sen. Anthony H. Williams' candidacy.
Williams came in second, 30 percentage points behind
former City Councilman Jim Kenney.
Three IE groups that supported Kenney raised nearly $4
million.
One of them, Building a Better PA Fund, raised $1.8
million, including $268,200 in the latest reporting period, from May 5 to June
8. Much of the group's money came from building-trades unions, including
$725,000 from union carpenters in New Jersey and $550,000 from Local 98 of the
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers.
Another pro-Kenney group, Forward Philadelphia, raised
$1.4 million, including $783,100 in the latest reporting period. That group was
also heavy with union money, including $200,000 from the Philadelphia
Federation of Teachers and $400,000 from the American Federation of Teachers.
A third pro-Kenney group, the Turnout Project, raised
$850,000, though most of that was the money from the New Jersey carpenters that
was passed along quickly to Building a Better Pennsylvania Fund.
A 2010 U.S. Supreme Court ruling allows IE groups to
raise and spend unlimited amounts of money - outside the city's campaign
finance limits of $2,900 per individual and $11,500 for political action
committees. The groups are not allowed to coordinate efforts with candidates or
campaigns.
Kenney reported raising $508,936 in the closing days of
the primary campaign, as polls showed him pulling ahead.
Williams brought in $220,104 in those four weeks. Former
District Attorney Lynne M. Abraham raised $134,312 while former Common Pleas
Court Judge Nelson A. Diaz brought in $135,385, and former State Sen. T. Milton
Street Sr. received $17,000. The Philadelphia Board of Elections said it did
not receive a report from former PGW executive Doug Oliver.
Melissa Murray Bailey, the lone Republican running for
mayor, reported raising $5,545 from May 5 to June 8, leaving her with $9,320 in
the bank.
Source: Philly.com
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