-->>This week, you have the chance to change the latter part of this equation: replace Mulgrew with Julie Cavanagh of the MORE caucus as UFT president.
And now we see that Thompson has received four figure donations from Randi Weingarten and Merryl Tisch.
Credit Geoff Decker, Gotham Schools for scooping this story:
Bill Thompson lags behind his Democratic rivals in fundraising, but he’s out in front in one area of interest: support from high-profile education officials.Click to http://gothamschools.org/2013/03/19/bill-thompson-bid-gets-help-from-high-profile-education-figures/ for the rest of the story.
As he has ramped up his fund-raising efforts in recent months, Thompson has raked in thousands of dollars in donations from notable public figures in education, including American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, New York State Board of Regents Chancellor Merryl Tisch and, most recently, Matthew Goldstein, chancellor of the City University of New York, filings show.
Weingarten, who worked closely with Thompson when the pair overlapped during previous city education posts more than a decade ago, gave $2,000 to his campaign in two installments on Jan. 10 and Jan. 11. Tisch contributed $4,950 — the maximum allowed by the city’s campaign finance laws — to Thompson’s six-month haul ending in January, which totaled more than $1 million.
In his latest three-month filing, which totaled $322,000 and ended last week, Thompson took in $500 from Goldstein, records show. Goldstein, who along with Weingarten sits on Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s Education Reform Commission, gave the maximum $4,950 to Republican candidate Joe Lhota, a member of CUNY’s Board of Trustees.
Weingarten gave to Thompson. New Action supported both Thompson and Weingarten. Makes sense to me.
ReplyDeleteAs in 2009, Thompson is a Potemkin candidate, a facsimile who exists to give the appearance of someone actually contesting for power. His campaign in 2009 was a sham, with him not even bothering to take polls that would have shown him to be within striking distance of defeating Bloomberg.
ReplyDeleteThis year, he's here to divert attention and votes from Liu and DeBlasio, in the hope that Quinn/Bloomberg can avoid a runoff. Thus his support from Weingarten, Tisch and Goldstein.