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Who Were The Big N.H. Contributors In The '08 Election?

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  • Who Were The Big N.H. Contributors In The '08 Election?

    WHO WERE THE BIG N.H. CONTRIBUTORS IN THE '08 ELECTION?
    By Bob Sanders

    New Hampshire Business Review
    Dec 5 2008
    NH

    All in all, New Hampshire residents who made donations of $200 or
    more contributed $11.7 million in the last two-year federal election
    cycle, which ran from October 2006 to early last month. And the total
    doesn't include most of last month's surge in what has been a deluge
    of campaign cash.

    That might seem like a lot of money, but it pales in comparison to
    donations nationwide, which topped $2.2 billion during the same period.

    Among the higher-profile contributors was Steve Duprey, a developer
    and owner of Foxfire Property Management, a Concord-based developer
    of hotels and other commercial buildings, who worked as an adviser
    and fund-raiser for Republican presidential candidate John McCain.

    And there was Gary Hirshberg, the chief executive of Stonyfield Farm,
    the Londonderry-based yogurt manufacturer, who was an early backer
    and fund-raiser for President-elect Barack Obama.

    Like so many others participating in the last election, Duprey and
    Hirshberg and their families gave more than their time. The Hirshbergs
    contributed a total of $87,000 last election cycle, with $41,000 going
    to Obama, while the Dupreys gave $75,000, with $51,000 going to McCain.

    But they weren't the largest New Hampshire contributors by any
    means. Family members of Yalcin Ayasli, the founder of Nashua-based
    Hittite Microwave, donated $366,650 to both sides, and particularly
    to candidates supporting Turkey.

    Executives from White Mountains Insurance's Hanover headquarters
    donated more than $205,000, with more than half of it going to McCain,
    while executives from the former Hampton-based Fisher Scientific
    (since merged into Thermo Fisher Scientific) and its various offshoots
    - including Latona Associates and Liberty Lane Partners -- dropped
    nearly $160,000 on federal candidates and political committees. Former
    Fisher executives donated $47,000 to Latona's own PAC, which gave to
    both Republican U.S. Sen. John Sununu and the opponent who will replace
    him, former Gov. Jeanne Shaheen. Former Fisher/Latona executives also
    donated another $14,000 to the two Senate candidates, with $2,000
    more going to Sununu than Shaheen. Another $27,500 went to the failed
    presidential campaign of Connecticut Sen. Chris Dodd and $9,000 going
    to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

    With the presidential primary, said Hirshberg, New Hampshire residents
    "are used to giving with their feet," but now they have "dug deep" into
    their pockets as well. And that digging has been to Hirshberg's liking.

    Even excluding the small Internet donations that Obama has made his
    trademark, the president-elect swamped his opponent among bigger New
    Hampshire donors, raising nearly $1.94 million, compared to McCain's
    $865,000. As a whole, Democrats also raised more money, though the
    difference wasn't as great -- $5.3 million to $4.7 million.

    Business executives and business owners make up the greatest percentage
    of those who were able to donate $200 or more. In the past, they have
    tended to contribute to Republicans. But not this year.

    "The Democrats have done a very good job convincing the business
    community that they have their best interest at heart," said
    Duprey. "The next two years will be very telling in that regard."

    Of course, most business executives in New Hampshire, like Duprey and
    Hirshberg, appear to be donating out of personal beliefs, not because
    they are hoping for something in return. Duprey, a former Republican
    Party chairman, said that he doubts that "a federal politician is
    going to do much to help property management."

    And Hirshberg, who has a clock ticking away the last seconds of the
    Bush administration outside his office, said his contributions "are
    not at all related to my business interests."

    Mystery donors Not all of the big givers were affiliated with
    for-profit corporations.

    There were professionals affiliated with institutions like state
    government, universities and hospitals, and their donations were
    skewed more Democratic. And there are other donors more affiliated
    with the private market, some with companies from out state, and some
    that depend on government contracts.

    Other contributors worked in the private market, but their business
    interests could not be identified. While contributors are supposed
    to list their occupation on the disclosure form, many left the
    line blank, or simply put descriptions like "executive" or "owner,"
    without identifying what was owned or which company or institution
    was the employer.

    Others wrote "retired" without mentioning that they still were a
    major stockholder in the company. And often these executives' family
    members made comparable donations, with similar nondescript terms
    used to describe their occupation.

    All told, those donating some $4.15 million could not be tracked to
    any organization. As a whole they were split, with Obama receiving
    the largest chunk of change, some $886,600.

    One such mystery donor is Anthony Ryan, of Lyme, the single biggest
    individual contributor residing in New Hampshire, donating $114,000
    (not counting the $27,500 donated by his wife Sue Ryan). Sue Ryan once
    listed herself as retired from Zephyr Technology, but NHBR could not
    determine which of several businesses by that name she was affiliated
    with, and if that was the source of the Ryans' wealth. (Both Ryans
    declined comment for this story.)

    Anthony Ryan appears to have bought or inherited some family property
    in Lyme in the 1970s and did once attempt to win election to the town
    budget committee. But his giving shows an interest more in national
    affairs. The Ryans' biggest donation ($30,000) went to the Club
    for Growth, a conservative political action committee that often
    challenges moderate Republicans, which it chastises as RINOs, or
    "Republicans in Name Only."

    In the 2008 presidential race, the Club for Growth was critical of
    Mike Huckabee, using funds from backers of Mitt Romney to attack him
    as a tax-increasing former governor of Arkansas. Huckabee, in turn,
    has referred to the PAC as the Club for Greed. But most of the club's
    recent ads attacked congressional liberal Democrats as anti-business,
    pro-tax and in favor of more government bureaucracy.

    NHBR gained more information about other unaffiliated contributors.

    Joseph Petrone and his wife Augusta, of Dublin, donated more than
    $100,000 each, for a total of $207,125, primarily to Republican
    candidates, with nearly half of that money going to McCain. Petrone is
    a former U.S. permanent representative to the European Office of the
    United Nations and Other International Organizations in Geneva during
    the Reagan and first Bush administrations. Before that, Petrone spent
    most of his career in the military. Their political involvement goes
    back a long way. Augusta co-chaired the 1984 Reagan-Bush campaign
    in Iowa.

    State Rep. Susan Almy, D-Lebanon, who chairs the state House Ways
    and Means Committee, and her mother Katherine were the next biggest
    unaffiliated donors, giving $83,000 between them. Katherine is the
    widow of Thomas P. Almy, who was chair of the Department of Medicine
    at Dartmouth College. Their largest donations, some $16,500, went to
    the Democratic National Committee.

    Hittite Microwave Yalcin Ayasli, whose family hails from Turkey and
    now lives in Nashua, founded Hittite Microwave, a manufacturer of
    high-performance integrated circuits for communications systems,
    in 1985. He built it into a company that reported $45.5 million in
    revenue, with a profit of $13.7 million, in the last quarter.

    In 2007, about half of its revenue came from government contracts,
    primarily the U.S. Army, Navy and Air Force and NASA.

    Although Ayasli resigned as chief executive in 2004 and as board
    chairman in 2005, his family still controls about a third of the
    company's stock according to latest filings with the SEC.

    Ayasli and other family members gave more than $330,000 during the last
    election cycle, and for the most part did not give locally. The two
    top recipients were the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee
    ($74,000) and the National Republic Congressional Committee ($72,000).

    Nearly $39,000 went to the Turkish Coalition PAC, which at one point
    gave Hittite's address as its own, along with that of the Turkish
    Cultural Foundation.

    The groups support Turkey in its various disputes, including
    the conflict in Iraq, supporting occasional Turkish military
    operations against Kurdish groups that cross back and forth over the
    Iraqi border. The groups also disputed the Armenian claim - and a
    U.S. congressional resolution -- that the Turks engaged in genocide
    against the Armenians in 1915.

    The Ayaslis spent nearly $14,000 to back Katrina Swett's aborted
    attempt to win the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination in New
    Hampshire. Swett is the daughter of the late Congressman Tom Lantos,
    who condemned Kurdish attacks in Turkey, though he also supported the
    congressional resolution against the Armenian genocide. Swett bowed
    out of the race after Shaheen declared her candidacy.

    Nearly $11,000 of the Ayaslis' money went to Virginia Foxx, R-N.C., who
    sponsored a resolution congratulating Turkey for celebrating Republic
    Day. Foxx's son-in-law is a Turkish businessman and Foxx herself is
    a member of the congressional Caucus on U.S.-Turkish Relations. She
    has been a leader against the Armenian genocide resolution.

    But recipients of Ayasli money also served on congressional committees
    that might be useful to Hittite. For instance, the Ayaslis donated
    about $9,200 to U.S. Rep. Edward Whitfield, R-Ky., the ranking
    minority leader of the House Commerce Subcommittee on Trade. And
    they gave $7,700 to U.S. Rep. Bill Pascrell (D-N.J.), who heads the
    Subcommittee on Emerging Threats and the Subcommittee on Trade. And
    they contributed $5,400 to Brad Miller, D-N.C., who is on the House
    Committee on Science and Technology, chairing its Investigations and
    Oversight Subcommittee.

    Both Hittite Microwave and Yalcin Ayasli did not return NHBR phone
    calls by deadline.

    Beacon Capital Partners President Clinton once referred to Fred Seigel
    of North Hampton, president of Boston-based Beacon Capital Partners
    and contributor of some $86,000 during the last election cycle --
    as the "Energizer bunny" of political fund-raising.

    Seigel, former deputy finance director for Bill Clinton's campaign in
    New England, and his business partner Alan Leventhal helped raise some
    $3 million for the Democratic National Committee during the Clinton
    presidency. Both were invited to the White House to have coffee.

    Seigel laughs now when he is reminded of President Clinton's reference
    to his fund-raising prowess, but he wasn't laughing after a 1997 Wall
    Street Journal article alleged he was mixing business and politics
    too closely.

    Despite an immediate correction, the article resulted in the
    U.S. Department of Housing Urban Development pulling out of a major
    deal involving Seigel's Energy Capital Partners that would have
    insulated thousands of low-income homes. The matter was only put to
    rest a decade later, after Seigel won a $8.8 million damage awards
    judgment in a beach-of-contract lawsuit against HUD.

    (Eventually, HUD admitted liability but it contended that there
    was no way to assess damages since no loans had been consummated
    yet. In addition, there was very little precedent to award damages
    for any reason on a breach of a federal contract. But the court -
    after an elaborate analysis of how much damages should be awarded,
    concluded, "True, lost profits are rarely awarded against the United
    States. 'Rarely,' however, is not the same as 'Never.'")

    Seigel won't comment on the matter any more, but although he has
    "throttled back" on political giving since then, "I still support
    people who I like," he said.

    While his largest contribution ($25,000) went to the Democratic Party,
    his next went to Dodd's failed presidential bid ($11,500). Seigel
    used to work at Latona Associates which also gave money to Dodd.

    Siegel didn't contribute to the Obama campaign, but he still has
    a friend in the White House. He gave $2,300 to the campaign of
    U.S. Rep. Rahm Emanuel, who the president-elect recently named his
    White House chief of staff.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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