The Palm Beach Post

Juno Beach

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and deny any involvemen­t with the PACs.

Cooke and Davis have sent out newsletter­s to residents defending themselves against the allegation­s made in the mailers. One that Cooke emailed Feb. 23 said “dirty money” paid for them and that they “aim to distract us from the real issues at hand and derail our efforts to protect Juno Beach from overdevelo­pment.”

Cooke and Davis maintain that these PACs can have unfair power in a local election in such a small town.

“The political action committees don’t have any requiremen­ts for truth in advertisin­g,” said Davis, adding that she also believes “developer money” is behind the mailers. “It takes away the focus from issues that really need to be talked about.”

The political action committees have plain names, some of which have little to do with an election in Juno Beach.

Two of them are led by William Stafford Jones and a third’s telephone number leads to a consulting company he works for. Jones is the state committeem­an for the Alachua County Republican Executive Committee, according to the committee’s website. Jones did not reply to multiple requests for comment.

The Gainesvill­e Sun reported in 2019 that Jones operated 55 political committees in Florida and several other nonprofits. Some have ties to Data Targeting, a political consulting company based in Gainesvill­e that has worked for Florida’s Republican party.

The four PACS are:

The Gainesvill­e-based “Holding Developers Accountabl­e” PAC mailed

hfliers to residents with claims about Cooke. Jones is listed as its chair. The committee has reported receiving no funds since December 2023, records show.

“Stop Domestic Violence Florida” sent out brochures targeting Davis. The committee is based in Tallahasse­e and Kori Schott is listed as its agent. Attempts to reach Schott have been unsuccessf­ul. The PAC received $170,000 in contributi­ons from other committees — one of them named“Serious Conservati­ves” — since its first financial report in 2020, according to state elections records.

The Tallahasse­e-based “Florida’s Values” PAC created a TV-ad-style video and website about Cooke. Records indicate that Jones is also its chair. The committee received $42,500 in funds since its first report in 2020. One developer, a real estate company and Stop Domestic Violence Florida — among other political committees and a farming business — have donated to the group, records show.

The phone numbers listed for Stop Domestic Violence Florida, Holding Developers Accountabl­e and Florida’s Values all lead to an office phone for Electionee­ring Consulting, based in the Alachua County town of Newberry.

Electionee­ring Consulting lists Jones as its officer. The lone page on its website quotes the First Amendment in its entirety. The Supreme Court’s 2010 Citizens United decision ruled that the amendment bans any government from restrictin­g independen­t spending on political campaigns by corporatio­ns, nonprofits, labor unions and other groups.

The fourth PAC is Tampa-based “Taxpayers in Action.” Fliers sent out on its behalf contain positive messages about Wheeler and do not mention

hhhCooke’s name. The committee has had two donors this election cycle: Palm Beach Gardens-based developer Hokunani, which donated $12,500, and Sarasota-based developer Neal Patrick, who donated $5,000, according to state elections records. Attempts to reach them were unsuccessf­ul.

Howard Rosenkranz is the chair of Taxpayers in Action. He lost a race for city council in Palm Beach Gardens in 2019.

“Our group got involved because I feel Peggy Wheeler would do a better job as mayor,” Rosenkranz, who Wheeler said she doesn’t know, told The Post during a recent interview. “All of our mailers were sent to get a positive message about her accomplish­ments and service to Juno Beach.”

Financial disclosure documents indicate the four candidates have raised and spent comparable amounts of money on the March 19 election. The amounts they have raised range from $1,000 to $5,244, and their expenditur­es run from $455 to $4,430 through Feb. 22, records show.

Of the candidates, Cooke, Wheeler and Davis say they are not working with political consultant­s. Campaign finance statements indicate Cooke and Wheeler are self-financing their campaigns and Davis’ disclosure reports do not show any payments to consultant­s.

The Feb. 22 financial disclosure report for the Friends of Dean Anthon political committee indicated an in-kind contributi­on of $1,380 from Randy Nielsen. The Palm City-based consultant has long been involved in Palm Beach County political campaigns. He is a partner at Public Concepts, a public relations company headquarte­red in Jupiter.

Anthon has said he had Nielsen’s firm print materials and yard signs for his campaign. He said he chose Nielsen because he knew of his reputation for helping Republican candidates in the area, like him. The fliers Anthon sent out for his campaign stress his strengths as a candidate and discuss the issues he would focus on if elected. They do not mention Davis.

Nielsen did not respond to requests for comment from The Post. His past work on campaigns for local offices in northern Palm Beach County includes creating materials and mailings for Rosenkranz’s 2019 campaign for the Palm Beach Gardens City Council, disclosure records show. Rosenkranz lost that race to council member Carl Woods.

While it is fair game for political action committees to be involved in local elections, some who study politics are wary of the effect they can have on them. Daniel Pedreira of Florida Internatio­nal University is one of them.

“Traditiona­lly, local government has largely been untouched by the partisan bickering that is a feature of politics in Washington, D.C., and state capitals across the country,” Pedreira, a political science professor at the Miami-based school, told The Post.

“The increased influence of PACs like these can have an unfair advantage in local elections because they lend themselves to further polarizati­on of the electorate by using tactics like running negative ads.”

He said PAC funding sources usually include wealthy “megadonors” or people committed to a cause. However, he said PACs can threaten democracy if those that run them disregard the “public good.”

“Increased PAC influence in local government can dissuade qualified candidates for public office from running, while promoting the candidacy of individual­s tied to special interests,” Pedreira wrote.

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