The Mercury News

Council races draw big money

Incumbents outraise competitor­s in donations, finance reports show

- By Maggie Angst mangst@bayareanew­sgroup.com

With less than two weeks until Election Day, the candidates vying for open seats on the San Jose City Council have raked in more than $1 million as special interest groups from developers to Realtors and labor unions try to stake out a role in the outcome.

Matt Mahan, a tech entreprene­ur who founded the nonpartisa­n voter network Brigade, not only has nabbed the most high-profile endorsemen­ts among the 15 candidates but also raised the largest amount of money, $184,924, according to his latest campaign finance report.

All four incumbents — District 2 Councilmem­ber Sergio Jimenez, District 4 Councilmem­ber Lan Diep, District 6 Councilmem­ber Dev Davis and District 8 Councilmem­ber Sylvia Arenas — are running contested but have significan­tly outraised their competitor­s.

The March 3 election could shift the power balance on the council, currently split between a six-member majority primarily backed by business groups and a five-member minority largely supported by labor unions. Two of the seats filled by labor-backed candidates and three occupied by business-backed candidates are up for grabs.

The elected council members will be making critical decisions affecting San Jose’s future — from reaching a developmen­t agreement with Google to devising a plan to reduce pedestrian deaths to beefing up the ranks of the police force to curbing displaceme­nt of longtime residents.

The race to fill the District 10 seat, which will be vacated by termed-out Councilmem­ber

Johnny Khamis, is among the most competitiv­e, with Mahan supported by Mayor Sam Liccardo, Vice Mayor Chappie Jones, Santa Clara County Supervisor Joe Simitian and the Silicon Valley Organizati­on PAC, the political arm of the region’s largest chamber of commerce.

Mahan, who said he wants to focus on improving data-driven accountabi­lity in government, has received more than 500 individual donations from community members and stakeholde­rs, with some of his most notable donors including developers Jay Paul and KT Urban, the California Apartment Associatio­n and Laborers Local Union 270.

“We’ve run a very focused, grassroots campaign for the past six months,” Mahan said in an interview this week. “And I think the large base of small-dollar and in-district donors that we’ve been able to attract is pretty rare in these local elections and gives me real independen­ce.”

Mahan’s opponents include retired business owner Helen Wang, who has raised $40,315, including $8,000 in personal loans, and Women’s March Bay Area President Jenny Higgins Bradanini, who has brought in $31,731, including $8,000 in personal loans.

Bradanini, whose most notable contributo­rs include local labor unions, temporaril­y suspended her campaign in December after she struck and killed 66-year-old pedestrian Tim Starkey. Details surroundin­g the collision have not yet been released, as the case is still under investigat­ion by the Los Gatos-Monte Sereno Police Department.

In the District 4 race, Diep has outpaced his competitor­s by raising a staggering $166,751, including a $2,000 loan. Employment attorney Huy Tran trailed in second with $79,052, including a $5,000 personal loan. Berryessa Unified School District Trustee David Cohen raised $67,666, including nearly $20,000 in personal loans, and tech worker Jamal Khan reported $11,501 in contributi­ons, according to the latest campaign finance reports.

Tran, who wants to see the council impose stricter affordable housing requiremen­ts on developers, equated the donations to Diep’s campaign from developers like KT Urban to “a fox guarding a henhouse.”

“We’re getting a lot of support for people in the community and advocates who want to see the priorities on the council change, and so I’m not surprised that we’ve seen a ton of developer money come into this race,” Tran said.

Diep, who won his seat against an incumbent in 2016 without the backing of labor unions or the Silicon Valley Organizati­on and with significan­tly less money than his opponent, disagreed.

“I have a record of votes and policy making, and I have gained some allies in that,” Diep said. “But I don’t think anybody can be bought for $600.”

In San Jose, individual­s, businesses and labor unions can only donate a maximum of $600 to a single candidate, but that doesn’t stop candidates from raking in multiple big-dollar contributi­ons from various employees at a single company. Employees of the real estate

firm Sares Regis Group, for instance, donated a total of about $2,000 to Diep’s campaign.

In District 6, Davis, who is running for reelection in the most crowded field, has raised $153,309, including a $5,000 personal loan — far outpacing the rest of the candidates in the field. Biomedical Engineer Jake Tonkel, who has been endorsed by the South Bay Labor Council and numerous labor organizati­ons, came in second with $51,122, including a nearly $5,000 loan, while Marshall Woodmansee and Ruben Navarro each has secured less than $10,000.

While on the council, Davis — the only candidate in her race who has held public office — has pushed for the completion of Fire Station 37 in her district and has staunchly defended increases in the city’s police department budget to help expand the force.

In District 2, Jimenez has brought in $76,354, while his sole contender, Jonathan Fleming, raked in $44,342, including a $10,000 loan.

Jimenez and Fleming offer voters two stark options for the open seat.

Jimenez, backed by labor, has lived in the community for more than two decades and spent six years on the city’s parks commission before winning a seat on the council in 2016. During his first term, Jimenez played a vital role in saving 937 acres of Coyote Valley from being developed, acquiring funding for a police substation in south San Jose and working on a maintenanc­e agreement with Union Pacific along its tracks.

Fleming, a conservati­ve who has never held political office, moved into the district less than a year ago. He opposes levying any additional taxes on residents and thinks the city’s role of building affordable housing should be limited.

In District 8, Arenas, backed by more than a halfdozen local unions, has secured nearly double the fundraisin­g contributi­ons — $90,331 — as her opponent, Jim Zito, a member of the Evergreen School District board. Zito, who recently lost all of his bigname endorsemen­ts in the wake of publicity surroundin­g his 2007 divorce case, raised $46,535, including a $2,500 loan, according to this week’s filing.

Earlier this month, some of Zito’s divorce records — in which his ex-wife accused him of exhibiting overly controllin­g and emotionall­y abusive behavior toward her and their daughters — were posted on an attack website by the San Jose Police Officers’ Associatio­n PAC, which has endorsed Arenas and donated to her campaign. Although Zito said the documents only told one side of the story, prominent city leaders and organizati­ons such as Liccardo and the Silicon Valley Organizati­on PAC quickly pulled their support for the candidate.

“It’s unfortunat­e that my endorsers have pulled out without understand­ing the full truth, but it’s not that important because I’m not working for my endorsers, I’m working for my community,” Zito said.

Arenas has been a champion for improving services for families and children in her district, including reopening a community center and establishi­ng new teen programs. Arenas said she was “aghast” by the accusation­s made against Zito and that “no family should have to go through what that family was allegedly put through.”

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