|
|
|
|||||
|
"The United Food and Commercial Workers Union donated $100,000 to the Virginia Democratic Party, the largest contribution it has received from an individual, business or union in a decade, according to the State Board of Elections and the Virginia Public Access Project. The $100,000 was credited to the party's state account, meaning it cannot be used to influence this year's presidential or congressional races. But the donation allows the state party to pay its operating costs so it can focus additional resources on raising money for its federal account, which can be used to support Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) and congressional candidates. "We are happy to have their support, and we appreciate a shared interest in working families' conditions in Virginia," said Jared Leopold, a spokesman for the Virginia Democratic Party. The United Food and Commercial Workers has become one of the biggest financial backers of the state Democratic Party, excluding contributions from candidate and national party committees, according to the Virginia Public Access Project. The union fell just short of the largest single contribution collected by the party in modern times. In 1997, the AFL-CIO gave the state party a $110,000 contribution. The food workers' donation will certainly become fodder for Virginia Republicans, who have long argued that state Democrats are too closely aligned with organized labor. The party also collected $10,000 from Al Dwoskin, founder and chief executive
of a Fairfax County-based real estate corporation, and $25,000 from Hassan
Nemazee, an Iranian-born investment banker from New York, according to the
State Board of Elections. Nemazee, a major Democratic donor, served as co-chairman
of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's (D-N.Y.) fundraising effort during her
presidential campaign." (Tim Craig, The Washington Post, October
2, 2008)
|