Pa.'s record campaign donors: Trio give $5 million plus to Sen. Williams

June 23, 2010|By Tom Infield, Inquirer Staff Writer
  • Sen. Anthony Hardy Williams. Donors liked his school policy.

No one had ever donated anywhere close to this much cash for a political campaign in Pennsylvania.

Previous reports showed that a trio of executives at Susquehanna International Group in Bala Cynwyd already had ventured far into historic territory by giving at least $3 million to support State Sen. Anthony Hardy Williams' Democratic primary race for governor.

Postprimary reports are now in, and they reveal that the number was actually higher. A lot higher: $5,385,000.

Joel Greenberg gave $2.07 million. Jeffrey Yass contributed $1.86 million. Arthur Dantchik chipped in $1.45 million.

Not counting a few cases in which a wealthy candidate has financed his own campaign - Philadelphia mayoral contender Tom Knox spent $11 million on his primary in 2007 - these sums far exceeded all Pennsylvania benchmarks, veteran analysts said.

Not even Gov. Rendell, the most prolific fund-raiser in state history, ever had million-dollar donors.

"Ed never got close to a million dollars from anyone," said Comcast Corp. executive David L. Cohen, Rendell's closest political ally.

"I have never seen anything like this; it's just stunning," said Alan Kessler, a Philadelphia lawyer, who has specialized in Democratic fund-raising for two decades.

"It is amazing, absolutely astounding," said Barry Kauffman, executive director of Common Cause in Harrisburg, which is fighting to have Pennsylvania join 39 states that impose limits on donations to campaigns. New Jersey, for instance, caps gubernatorial donations at $3,400; Delaware caps them at $1,200.

The Pennsylvania Department of State said Tuesday that Williams, of West Philadelphia, had yet to submit his final campaign finance report, which by law was due Thursday.

But another report, submitted by the political action committee through which the Susquehanna executives mostly funneled their money to Williams, showed that the three donated $2.9 million to the Williams effort in the final eight days before the May 18 primary.

The bulk of that money went into TV and radio advertising, as Williams sought to catch up to poll-leader Dan Onorato, the Allegheny County executive.

In the end, Williams finished third, behind both Onorato and state Auditor General Jack Wagner.

The three executives had said through a spokesman before the primary that they were backing Williams because they liked his stance on school choice, particularly the use of publicly funded vouchers to enable more families to pay for private education.

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