Finance Board

Money for Nothing

seabrook.jpg

After a number of stories last year (here, here, and here) pointing to a common scam perpetrated by candidates running against token opposition, the city's Campaign Finance Board finally issued a report this week on the 2005 elections addressing a little problem with the way they give away money.

Under current rules, candidates may file a Statement of Need with the CFB, allowing them to collect matching funds for their campaigns even if their challengers haven't raised a single dollar. It's a way of ducking a measure built in to the system to limit money given to candidates who don't need it.

Take the example of Bronx Councilman Larry Seabrook last year.

Seabrook essentially pumped up his opponent's credentials, saying that the challenger "has the backing of Mayor Bloomberg's high-spending mayoral re-election campaign."

After sending that letter, which allowed him to collect more than $70,000, Seabrook promptly endorsed Bloomberg.

-- Azi Paybarah CORRECTION: The original post said that Seabrook used most of the matching funds he receieved to pay his own brother for working on the campaign.

What this filing actually shows is that Seabrook's brother is owed (Schedule N) tens of thousands of dollars, but was paid only a fraction of that (Schedule F). Furthermore, as a lawyer for Seabrook called to point out, his brother was paid with private contributions, not the matching funds.  read more »

Additional fundraisers will be held to pay him the rest, the lawyer said.

Betsy Re-Ducks

The Politicker took some heat a couple of weeks ago for suggesting that Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum was ducking a televised debate moderated by WCBS's Andrew Kirtzman.

We were not, it turns out, wrong.

Now another station, WABC, has sent this email to the other candidates about its own debate, set to air August 21:

"The participants will be [Andrew] Rasiej, Norman Siegel and Jay Golub.... Betsy Gotbaum has declined our invitation and will only do the two required of her by the Campaign Finance Board."  read more »

Gotbaum consultant Hank Sheinkopf tells us only that she's complying with the law.

"Why would anybody want to be on a stage with Norman Siegel, whose whole style of campaigning is to scream and yell and be negative?" he asked.