Oct 26, 2024
The flood of TV ads and mailers in the races for San Diego mayor and city attorney is being funded mostly by independent committees that aren’t subject to the city’s $1,350 campaign contribution limit. A committee supporting mayoral challenger Larry Turner has spent more than $850,000 since late September on TV ads and mailers — far more than the $27,000 Turner’s campaign spent during the same period. The incumbent, Mayor Todd Gloria, has benefited from a committee jointly supporting him and incumbent Councilmember Stephen Whitburn. That committee has spent more than $640,000 since late September, while the candidates themselves spent just over $300,000 combined during that period. In the city attorney’s race, a committee supporting several city candidates spent $117,000 on a recent mailer supporting Deputy City Attorney Heather Ferbert and opposing Assemblymember Brian Maienschein. That’s more than the $100,000 Ferbert has spent since late September. A different committee has spent more than $100,000 on ads supporting Maienschein since late September. The candidate himself has spent $123,000 since then. But another committee has run TV ads that prominently feature Maienschein, funded by an $800,000 war chest contributed by separate committees he controls. The ads promote Proposition 3 — which would enshrine the right to same-sex marriage in the state constitution — but Maienschein’s name appears on the screen, and he does all the talking. The money comes from two committees Maienschein created for other elections: $600,000 from his 2022 Assembly re-election campaign, and $200,000 from Maienschein for Attorney General 2030. Spending by committees is also playing a role, although a much smaller one, in races for City Council. The committee that paid for the $117,000 pro-Ferbert mailer, which is controlled by the city’s largest labor union, has also paid for mailers supporting Gloria and council incumbents Whitburn and Sean Elo-Rivera. That committee — Protect Neighborhood Services Now, Sponsored by San Diego Municipal Employees Association — spent $37,000 supporting Elo-Rivera, $33,000 supporting Whitburn and $6,000 supporting Gloria. That total of $193,000 is on top of $500,000 the committee contributed to the campaign supporting Measure E, a 1-cent sales tax increase that would generate about $400 million a year in new revenue for the city. According to the latest fundraising disclosures submitted this week for all city races and ballot measures, the campaign supporting Measure E raised $246,000 during the reporting period, Sept. 22 through Oct. 19. The campaign supporting Measure E — called Penny for Progress, Yes on Measure E — spent $508,000 during the period, primarily on TV ads and mailers. A committee opposing Measure E, which is controlled by the San Diego County Taxpayers Association’s political action committee, spent $18,000 on digital ads. A committee supported by a police labor union, the San Diego Police Officers Association political action committee, spent $24,000 supporting Maienschein, $21,000 supporting Whitburn and $19,000 supporting Terry Hoskins, who is challenging Elo-Rivera in District 9. The committee supporting Turner — Turn San Diego Around in Support of Larry Turner for Mayor 2024, sponsored by the Lincoln Club Business League — raised $909,000 during the reporting period and spent $856,000. The main contributor to the committee is Point Loma attorney Steven Richter. The committee supporting Gloria and Whitburn — San Diegans for Fairness Supporting Todd Gloria for Mayor & Stephen Whitburn for Council 2024 — raised $822,000 during the reporting period and spent $640,000. In the mayor’s race, Gloria out-raised Turner during the reporting period $107,000 to $34,000. He also outspent Turner, $286,000 to $27,000. Gloria had $192,000 to spend during the final days of the race, while Turner had $28,000. In the city attorney’s race, Ferbert outraised Maienschein $23,000 to $735 during the reporting period. Maienschein outspent Ferbert $123,000 to $100,000, but she had more money left for the final days, $32,000 versus $15,000. In the race for Council District 3, Whitburn and challenger Colleen Cusack each raised just over $2,000 during the reporting period. But Whitburn outspent Cusack $24,000 to $1,700 and had much more left for the final days, $53,000 versus $4,000. In District 9, Elo-Rivera outraised Hoskins $17,000 to $6,000 during the reporting period. Elo-Rivera also outspent Hoskins $12,000 to $9,000 and had more money left for the final days, $36,000 versus $8,400.
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