Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Claim about Hovde homes misleads

Shelters, not residences, in Central America

- Madeline Heim

Republican businessma­n Eric Hovde jumped in the race for one of Wisconsin’s U.S. Senate seats Tuesday, setting up a contest with U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, a Democrat, and prompting a wash of criticism of his background and motivation­s.

One such criticism – from Heartland Signal, a digital newsroom anchored to a progressiv­e Chicago radio station – lacked some key context.

Heartland Signal shared a snippet of Hovde’s announceme­nt event on X, in which the candidate spoke about the horrors of human trafficking.

"My brother and I have homes all over the world, and we have three in Central America, that deal with issues like this," Hovde said.

In the post, Heartland Signal wrote that “Eric Hovde says he understand­s the tragedy of children being trafficked through Central America because he owns three homes there.”

That paints a bit of a misleading picture, especially given that Democrats and allies have portrayed Hovde as a carpetbagg­er, citing his owning residences in California and Washington, D.C.

Let’s take a quick dive in.

Hovde is referring to charitable shelters, not private homes

Other X users, including Milwaukee Journal Sentinel state politics reporter Jessie Opoien, were quick to point out what Heartland Signal left out. The homes Hovde referenced are shelters financed by his company’s charitable giving foundation, not residences as the post suggests.

According to the foundation’s website, Hovde “has financed and oversees the constructi­on and operation of Hovde Houses, which are homes that provide shelter, supportive services, education and love to vulnerable street children.”

The website of Hovde’s company, Hovde Properties, describes them as providing “shelter, care, education and love to vulnerable children that were abandoned on the street or trafficked.” It also refers to them as Hovde Homes.

Hovde’s campaign website also mentions the shelters under a section titled “Hovde’s Heart.” Twelve shelters have been completed to date in Bolivia, Ghana, Guatemala, Honduras, Kenya, Malawi, Mexico, Peru, Rwanda and Wisconsin, according to the site, and one is currently in progress in Costa Rica.

Beyond the above, little informatio­n exists online about the shelters. A 2014 Wisconsin State Journal article says Hovde opened the first one in Mexico City in 2006, which had served more than 200 homeless children.

Still, it’s clear that those were the homes he was referencin­g, not private homes.

It appears that Heartland Signal, too, realized the distinctio­n.

“While not mentioned in his speech, Hovde appears to be referring to his charitable foundation, Hovde Homes,” they replied to the original X post.

Our ruling

Progressiv­e outlet Heartland Signal claimed that “Eric Hovde says he understand­s the tragedy of children being trafficked through Central America because he owns three homes there.”

The homes he spoke of are shelters for vulnerable children, not residences. The original post left that distinctio­n up to the public to suss out.

Our definition of Mostly False is a statement that contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression.

That fits here.

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