New York Post

BLAS $TOP SIGN

OKs kaw vs. big donors - like his

- By MICHAEL GARTLAND mgartland@nypost.com

As two probes into his fundraisin­g efforts loom, Mayor de Blasio buckled under pressure from the City Council and signed into law Thursday a bill that restricts fat donations like those that filled the coffers of his shuttered, scandal-scarred advocacy group.

The measure, which limits the amount of cash a candidatea­ligned nonprofit could raise, directly addresses the practices of the de Blasio-controlled Campaign for One New York, which has raised more than $4.4 million since 2014 and is now the focus of a federal investigat­ion.

The law prohibits lobbyists, entities or donors with business before the city from giving more than $400 to nonprofits tied to elected officials or their staffers and also requires that all of those donations be disclosed.

CONY has received massive, unlimited donations, including $100,000 from a shell company tied to the Two Trees real-estate firm, $35,000 from the Broadway Stages film company and $75,000 from Wendy Neu, one of the guiding forces behind the anti-horse-carriage movement. Unions also pumped tens of thousands of dollars into CONY.

The proposal, one of 22 bills de Blasio signed into law to impose tighter campaign-finance restrictio­ns, was pushed by Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito and other council members.

De Blasio held a tight smile throughout much of the billsignin­g ceremony Thursday in the City Council chambers, occasional­ly joking about all the legislatio­n before him.

“I’ve never seen so many bills in one place. It’s an avalanche of bills, a tsunami of bills,” he said as several council members gathered around. “It feels like I’ll be doing this for the rest of my life.” He refused to answer ques- tions after the event.

The mayor is facing two corruption investigat­ions — one a state probe into Team de Blasio’s efforts to help Democrats win the state Senate in 2014, and another into CONY’s fund-raising and the mayor’s own campaign committee.

Grand juries have been convened in connection with both investigat­ions.

Government-watchdog groups applauded the new laws.

Dick Dadey, the director of watchdog Citizens Union, called the measures a “historic day for campaign finance.”

 ??  ?? DONE: City Council members watch Thursday as the mayor signs a law restrictin­g donations.
DONE: City Council members watch Thursday as the mayor signs a law restrictin­g donations.

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