New York Daily News

10HAT’S ILLEGAL, COUNCILMAN, COMPLAINT TO FEDS SAYS

Diaz Sr. is accused of food distributi­on elections violations in heat of Bronx congressio­nal run

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

City Councilman Ruben Diaz Sr. — the front-runner in the race for Rep. Jose Serrano’s South Bronx congressio­nal seat — allegedly ran afoul of election law, a new complaint filed with the Federal Election Commission reveals.

The complaint, filed last Wednesday by the anti-Diaz political action committee Bronx United, accuses Diaz of knowingly accepting “illegal corporate contributi­ons” in violation of federal law.

It alleges that Diaz helped distribute food donated to the city’s five borough presidents by FreshDirec­t outside his City Council district and to advance his congressio­nal run.

Diaz’s son is Bronx Borough

President Ruben Diaz Jr.

The elder Diaz hasn’t been shy about advertisin­g his coronaviru­s outreach on social media and through email.

In three posts from his Twitter account between May 8 and June 5, Diaz Sr. is pictured giving out boxes of food in the districts of Bronx Council members Rafael Salamanca and Diana Ayala. According to the complaint, those giveaways also took place within the 15th Congressio­nal District, which Diaz Sr. hopes to win in the June 23 Democratic primary.

“It is unfathomab­le how Mr. Diaz Sr. could be conducting official business rather than campaignin­g at events which take place outside of the New York City district he currently represents, but within the congressio­nal district for which he is seeking election,” the complaint states. “Even if campaignin­g were not the primary purpose of these events, that does not cleanse the impropriet­y and illegality of Mr. Diaz Sr. receiving and accepting undisclose­d corporate contributi­ons provided by FreshDirec­t and using such contributi­ons to elicit favor.”

The Federal Election Commission declined to comment. A FreshDirec­t spokesman declined to directly address the complaint, but said the company “has no role in the individual distributi­on process once we have delivered to designated locations in the boroughs.”

It appears Diaz Sr. may also be mixing government and politics within his own Council district when it comes to food distributi­on. In a Thursday press release, he touts a “grocery giveaway” on Monday offering “free food and masks for the first 500 families of Castle Hill Houses.” The NYCHA complex is within his Council district, but the mailing address listed in the release is the same post office box listed in his Federal Election Commission filings.

As coronaviru­s has ravaged the city and as protests over police brutality have raged for almost two weeks, the race for Serrano’s congressio­nal seat has gone largely unnoticed outside the district. But it’s important for many reasons. It could mean the difference between the seat going to Diaz Sr., a socially conservati­ve Pentecosta­l minister who’s unlikely to win friends in the

House’s Democratic leadership, or someone more palatable to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

“He really would be without influence, and the district will be left abandoned at a moment when a huge influx of federal funds could really turn it around and provide for health care during a pandemic,” said Ken Sherrill, a professor emeritus of political science at Hunter College. “They’d get screwed. They might as well have no one representi­ng them.”

Diaz Sr. is known in New York political circles for his cowboy hats and his right-ofcenter stances on same-sex marriage, abortion and President Trump, but he has a formidable base that he’s built over decades.

He did not respond to requests for comment for this story.

When asked at a June 5 food giveaway outside his district to respond to criticisms leveled by competitor­s, he told a NY1 reporter simply: “No campaignin­g, just work.”

A recent poll has him slightly ahead of a crowded primary field, which includes Councilmen Ritchie Torres and Ydanis Rodriguez, as well as Assemblyma­n Michael Blake, former Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito and Samelys Lopez, who has the backing of the Democratic Socialists of America.

The poll gave Diaz a 2-point lead in the race, with 22% of those surveyed saying they would vote for him and 20% saying they would go with the second-ranked candidate, Torres. In an unusual move, the pollster, Data for Progress, essentiall­y endorsed Torres, noting on its website that progressiv­es should “consider supporting the most viable alternativ­e.”

Other competitor­s have bristled at that notion, but there’s some evidence political observers are taking notice. State Sen. Luis Sepulveda recently switched his allegiance from Blake to Torres, and LGBT activists have also urged long-shot candidates to drop out to boost Torres, who’s gay.

The complaint against Diaz Sr. is not his first brush with potential ethics violations.

In 2013, Clement Gardner, the financial head of two nonprofits tied to Diaz Sr., pleaded guilty to stealing more than $500,000 from them.

In 2018, the Council’s Ethics Committee found he violated Council ethics rules by using a work email address for political ends.

And in 2019, his colleagues called for him to resign after saying the “homosexual community” controlled the Council.

“It hardly poses a shock that Ruben Diaz Sr. is engaging in ethically questionab­le behavior,” Torres said of the latest complaint. “If you’re looking for cronyism and corruption, Diaz Sr. is your man.”

Diaz Sr.’s attorney Chris Lynn declined to comment on the substance of the complaint.

“We have prepared a formal response which will be submitted when we are formally served,” he said.

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 ??  ?? City Councilman Ruben Diaz Sr. (right) is the front-runner in highly competitiv­e congressio­nal contest that also includes Councilman Ydanis Rodriguez (opposite page far left) and former Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito.
City Councilman Ruben Diaz Sr. (right) is the front-runner in highly competitiv­e congressio­nal contest that also includes Councilman Ydanis Rodriguez (opposite page far left) and former Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito.

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