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The Crunch: Local Media Moguls Top List Of Minnesota's Biggest Polit

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  • The Crunch: Local Media Moguls Top List Of Minnesota's Biggest Polit

    THE CRUNCH: LOCAL MEDIA MOGULS TOP LIST OF MINNESOTA'S BIGGEST POLITICAL GIVERS
    By Paul Demko

    Minnesota Independent
    10/16/08 10:48 AM
    MN

    Stanley and Karen Hubbard are in a league of their own when it comes
    to political contributions. In the first 18 months of this election
    cycle the couple doled out $163,500 to federal political candidates
    and causes -- $40,000 more than the next most generous Minnesota
    household. Republicans have largely been the beneficiaries of their
    largesse, with more than 80 percent of that money ending up in GOP
    coffers.

    Stanley Hubbard The owners of Hubbard Broadcasting, which includes KSTP
    radio (AM-1500) and TV (Channel 5), are not newcomers to the political
    game. Since 1990 Stanley has made 468 political contributions totaling
    more than $1 million to federal campaigns across the country, according
    to the Center for Responsive Politics. Meanwhile, Karen has distributed
    204 donations totaling more than a quarter of a million dollars.

    Critics have sometimes accused Hubbard Broadcasting of letting the
    owners' political beliefs interfere with its journalism. Most recently
    the company's flagship TV station aired a rare editorial praising
    the behavior of police officers during the Republican National
    Convention, despite more than 800 arrests and accusations of police
    misconduct. Left unmentioned was the fact that Hubbard Broadcasting
    was a corporate sponsor of the event and that Stanley Hubbard served
    on the RNC Host Committee's executive board.

    In 2006 Democratic gubernatorial candidate Mike Hatch pilloried the
    company for its coverage of a gaffe by running mate Judi Dutcher
    regarding ethanol fuel E85. "Stan Hubbard is a political hack and he
    has a news media station that is full of political hacks," Hatch said
    at the time. "What they did is they took her out of context."

    The top 100 givers in the state have made $4.1 million in federal
    political contributions since the beginning of 2007, or more than
    $40,000 per household. Republican donors have cut checks for $2.3
    million, while their Democratic counterparts have contributed $1.8
    million. To get a better understanding of the state's most generous
    political patrons, the Minnesota Independent commissioned a study by
    the Center for Responsive Politics looking at the top 100 contributors.

    In the first six installments of this series we looked at the bottom
    90 members of the list, those contributing between $23,000 and
    $67,000. Today we hit the top 10. Donors on this section of the list
    contributed a total of $1,077,859 to federal political candidates and
    causes during the first 18 months of this election cycle. Democrats
    dominated this portion of the list, collecting nearly $700,000 from
    the top 10 donors.

    Right behind the Hubbards on the list is another influential media
    figure, John Cowles Jr. A native of Des Moines, Cowles came to
    Minneapolis in 1938 after his family purchased the Minneapolis Star
    newspaper. He eventually rose to become CEO of Cowles Media Co. and
    publisher of its flagship newspaper, the Star Tribune. In 1998 the
    company was sold to the McClatchy Co., and since then Cowles has been
    a prominent philanthropist and major Democratic contributor. So far
    this election cycle, Cowles and his wife, Sage, have given $122,000
    to campaigns and causes.

    Mark Dayton Not surprisingly, some of the other biggest names in
    Democratic political circles crop up at the top of the fundraising
    pyramid. Former Sen. Mark Dayton hits fourth place on the list,
    contributing at least $105,900 to Democratic campaigns and causes
    through the first 18 months of this election cycle. Roughly half
    that money ($52,000) went to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign
    Committee. Although Dayton walked away from the Senate in 2006 after
    just one term, he is often rumored to be mulling a run for governor
    in 2010. Spreading around lots of cash to Democratic candidates will
    undoubtedly endear him to the party faithful.

    Not far behind Dayton is his ex-wife, Alida Messinger. The Rockefeller
    heir, whose brother is Sen. Jay Rockefeller, has given at least $95,900
    to Democratic efforts since the beginning of 2007. Messinger, who is
    invariably referred to as secretive in media reports, has long been
    one of the most prolific Democratic donors in the country.

    A 2003 study by the Center for Public Integrity found that she'd given
    $2.3 million to so-called 527 groups during a two-year period, ranking
    her behind only Jane Fonda among the country's most generous donors
    to such organizations. She hasn't stopped writing checks since. An
    April study by the Campaign Finance Institute determined that she had
    contributed $433,000 to 527 groups in the first 13 months of this
    campaign cycle, making her the 11th largest donor to the advocacy
    organizations nationwide. She also has written a $1 million check
    this year to bolster support for a ballot referendum in Minnesota that
    would raise the sales tax to provide funding for the outdoors and arts.

    Jim Deal is a relative newcomer to the world of big-time Democratic
    donors. The retired insurance executive first made a splash in 2006
    when he donated $100,000 to Minnesotans for Change, an organization
    set up to thwart Gov. Tim Pawlenty's re-election plans. "Minnesota's
    on a disastrous collision course," Deal told the Star Tribune at the
    time. "Obviously, I'm a liberal."

    That outlay of cash may have been made in vain, but it hasn't
    stopped Deal from continuing to be one of the DFL Party's biggest
    backers. Since the beginning of 2007, Deal and his wife, Pamela,
    have contributed $119,560 exclusively to Democrats, making them the
    third most generous household in the state.

    On the Republican side of the ledger are a couple of prominent local
    business executives. George Anderson is vice president of operations
    at Roseville-based Crown Iron Works. He and his wife, Barbara, have
    contributed $94,400 to political campaigns since the beginning of 2007,
    with all but $4,400 of that money going toward Republicans. George
    Anderson also made a $10,000 contribution in 2006 toward a campaign to
    outlaw gay marriage. "I don't have anything against anyone personally,"
    Anderson told Minnesota Public Radio at the time. "But I think it's
    important to keep that definition straightforward, and not muddle
    it up."

    Brad Anderson Brad Anderson has also been a reliable source of cash for
    GOP candidates. The Best Buy CEO, who got his start as a sales clerk
    at stereo store Sound of Music, took in compensation of $49.3 million
    last year. Roughly $75,000 of that money ended up funding Republican
    campaigns. Among his contributions: $10,000 for the Republican Party of
    Minnesota and $5,000 for Sen. Norm Coleman's Northstar Leadership PAC.

    Gerard and Cleo Cafesjian are the rarest of big-bucks political donors:
    they give generously to both parties. The couple have contributed
    a total of $102,700 this election cycle, split between Democrats
    and Republicans. Staunch conservatives like Rep. Michele Bachmann
    ($5,500) have enjoyed their support, as have liberal politicians
    like Rep. Betty McCollum ($3,000). Gerard Cafesjian is a prominent
    Armenian-American businessman who made his fortune as an executive
    at West Publishing Co. The couple is best known for spending $1.2
    million to restore the Como Park carousel.

    Here's the complete list of donors occupying slots 1 through 10:

    1. Stanley and Karen Hubbard, Lakeland, Hubbard Broadcasting, $163,500

    2. John and Sage Cowles, Minneapolis, retired, $122,000

    3. Pamela and James Deal, Anoka, NAU Companies, $119,560

    4. Mark Dayton, Minneapolis, retired, $105,900

    5. Cleo and Gerald Cafesjian, Naples, retired, $102,700

    6. Joseph and Christina Sriver, Minneapolis, designer, $100,050

    7. John and Sheila Morgan, Minneapolis, Winmark Corp., $96,850

    8. Alida Messinger, Minneapolis, philanthropist, $95,900

    9. George and Barbara Anderson, Champlin, Crown Iron Works, $94,400

    10. Bradbury and Janet Anderson, Minneapolis, Best Buy, $76,999

    Previously in The Crunch:

    Minnesota's top 100 political givers: 11 to 20

    Minnesota's top 100 political givers: 21 to 30

    Minnesota's top 100 political givers: 31 to 40

    Minnesota's top 100 political givers: 41 to 50

    Minnesota's top 100 political givers: 51 to 75

    Minnesota's Top 100 political givers: 76 to 100

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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