Finance reports give insight into at-large City Council race
There's only a few days remaining until Pennsylvania's May 19 primary — when Philadelphia voters will choose a new mayor and may elect to dramatically shake up City Council.
Council's seven at-large seats are up for grabs and at least one will be taken by a newcomer.
According to the city charter, at least two of these seats go to Republicans as the minority party. Historically, based on the city's political demographics, Philly's at-large council members typically split five for Democrats and two for the GOP.
To focus on the Democrats: on primary day, voters can choose five candidates from a list of both incumbents and newcomers.
The incumbents are Wilson Goode Jr., Bill Greenlee, Blondell Reynolds Brown, and Ed Neilson.
Based on name recognition and connections to power brokers, incumbents typically win. But, in this race, at least one new face will join the 17-member body because Jim Kenney retired his at-large seat to run for mayor.
On Friday the candidates had to file campaign reports reflecting their fundraising and expenses through May 4.
So what did we learn from poring through tomes of campaign finance reports?
1) Only four of the 16 candidates have more than $100,000 left in the bank.
At-large Candidate | Total cash raised | Cash spent | Cash on hand |
---|---|---|---|
Wilson Alexander | $6,982 | $6,782 | $199 |
Jenne Ayers | $8,363 | $6,978 | $1,386 |
Marnie Aument-Loughrey | $4,817 | $2,688 | $2,129 |
Blondell Reynolds-Brown | $133,215 | $104,922 | $28,293 |
Carla Cain | $665 | $556 | $109 |
Sherrie Cohen | $270,415 | $107,854 | $162,561 |
Allan Domb | $926,626 | $670,404 | $256,222 |
Wilson Goode Jr. | $95,643 | $64,638 | $31,005 |
Derek Green | $129,724 | $74,291 | $55,443 |
Bill Greenlee | $201,654 | $148,290 | $53,365 |
Helen Gym | $282,452 | $71,593 | $210,859 |
Ed Neilson | $201,809 | $154,022 | $47,787 |
Frank Rizzo | $29,060 | $23,339 | $5,721 |
Paul Steinke | $415,400 | $285,049 | $130,351 |
Isiah Thomas | $180,527 | $113,149 | $67,378 |
Tom Wyatt | $199,084 | $114,945 | $84,139 |
As the chart above shows, real estate developer Allan Domb is in the best financial shape coming down the stretch, with a quarter of a million dollars left in the bank. Domb has already been advertising heavily on television. His stockpile of cash suggests he'll continue pounding the airwaves until the primary.
Public education advocate Helen Gym has the next most remaining cash, with more than $210,000. She's followed by attorney Sherrie Cohen (daughter of former city councilman David Cohen) and former Reading Terminal Market general manager Paul Steinke.