With mayoral and New York City Council primaries coming up in June, our reporters also have their hands full covering city politics, tracking how people with power — or seeking it — are maneuvering the political process.
Late Thursday, Chris Bragg and Julia Rock had a Cuomo scoop: Lobbyist and Cuomo family loyalist Tonio Burgos sent out a fundraising email for Andrew Cuomo’s mayoral campaign, promising donors that their contributions would be matched by the city’s matching funds program, even though his role as a lobbyist makes his solicited donations ineligible for matching. Furthermore, the Cuomo campaign disclosed having “no intermediaries” raising money for his campaign.
My colleagues wrote: “New York Focus identified fundraising pages that the Cuomo campaign set up for around 30 bundlers, though it’s not clear how many of them have solicited donations yet. The pages tell donors that their gifts will be matched, even though at least five of the bundlers do work that disqualifies donations they solicit from matching funds.”
In the name of transparency, the New York City Campaign Finance Board requires that candidates name any “intermediaries,” also known as bundlers, when filing campaign finance disclosures. These are individuals or groups who work on behalf of a campaign to collect contributions, which are often matched with taxpayer dollars. When auditors — or journalists — inspect campaign finance records and find clusters of donations that share a common denominator, the presence of an intermediary becomes evident.
That’s how reporters Chris Gelardi and Rock peeled back the curtain on funds raised for city council candidates by a pro-Israel group. They were able to match donations to Solidarity PAC even though candidates did not disclose their involvement. I asked Gelardi. to explain his methodology, which he developed while reporting on the group’s involvement in state Assembly elections last year.
“I looked at the campaign finance filings for all the candidates who they endorsed,” Gelardi said. Then he looked at everyone who donated to Solidarity PAC and matched them up. “So you had this bundle.”
State and city campaign finance laws are a little different, but he told me he was able to repeat a similar method. He looked at the candidates endorsed by Solidarity PAC, downloaded their campaign finance filings from the city’s campaign contribution portal, and put all the donors who contributed to that slate of candidates onto the same spreadsheet.
“All the donors who contributed to those candidates donated around the same time, which means they were likely responding to Solidarity PAC solicitations.”