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![]() Riley raised more than Pratt and Nardelli combined. His campaign finance report is studded with donors from the Milwaukee business community. |
Antonio Riley's Campaign Coffer Looks Mayoral News reports have made much of the money raised by Ald. Marvin Pratt and Ald. Tom Nardelli, speculating about their chances for mayor. Meanwhile, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel ignored the far more effective fundraising of Rep. Antonio Riley (D-Milwaukee), who received $33,514 in donations in the January through July 20 period. That is more than twice as much as Nardelli (with $14,9990) and Pratt ($14,650) raised during this period, but less than the $52,000 raised by Municipal Judge Vince Bobot. All this speculation could be premature: If John Norquist decides to run for reelection, many of the names mentioned as possible candidates are unlikely to run. Riley, who has been a protégé of Norquist, has made it clear he will only run if the mayor is not a candidate. But Riley has certainly shown he can raise money. Political observers had assumed his fundraising opportunities would dry up after he was kicked off the legislature's joint finance committee, in the coup that brought Spencer Black (D-Madison) to power as assembly minority leader. But Riley's campaign finance report shows he raised about $17,000 of his money since then. The report is studded with donations from the Milwaukee business community, which would be critical to any mayoral candidate. Donors include such business executives of as James Forbes of Badger Meter, Jim McKenna (North Shore Bank), Daniel McKeithan (Tamarack Petroleum), Fred Luber (Super Steel), James Wigdale (M&I Marshall & Ilsley), Sheldon Lubar (Lubar & Co.), Stephen Marcus (Marcus Corporation), developers Barry Mandel and Gary Grunau, and many others. Riley now has $56,233 cash on hand, which leaves him ahead of Pratt and Bobot in that department, and behind Nardelli ($118,000) and Norquist ($227,000). "I'm going to take all the necessary steps to be considered a qualified candidate [for mayor]," Riley told Milwaukee Magazine. He seems to be doing just that. Wagner is said to have considerable personal wealth he could use for a run for mayor. He has moved from Bayside to Milwaukee's East Side, so he's now a city resident. -Miller Park is a marvelous success. I've now sat in a luxury box, behind home plate, in grandstand seats along left field and in the right field bleachers, and enjoyed it every time. But the team is so bad its general manager Dean Taylor has admitted "realistically, we're not going to challenge the Cubs this year." The Brewers have to be seen as very competitive by the beginning of next season, or ticket sales will begin to drop and the window of opportunity to create a profitable franchise could close with a bang. -The downtown public library has an enjoyable coffee shop and used bookstore, which calls itself "Coffee With A Conscience." Owned and managed by the Wisconsin Women's Business Initiative, the shop's brochure declares it has an "environmental conscience" and "is committed to reducing waste." So I asked the man behind the counter where I could recycle the glass bottle for my fruit juice. He pointed to a bag of garbage. What happened to that "Environmental Conscience" noted in the shop's brochure, I asked. "Well, we ignore that part of it," he said. Irony of the week: after chastising Mayor Norquist in several articles and an editorial for going on vacation and missing important business, the MJS editorial board reportedly agreed to meet with Norquist, but asked to postpone it for a week because two board members were on vacation.
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