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‘Progressive’ PAC in Montgomery County is really a bunch of developers

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This content was republished with permission from WTOP鈥檚 news partners at Maryland Matters. Sign up for聽听迟辞诲补测.

Coming soon to the mailboxes of Democratic voters in Montgomery County 鈥 if they haven鈥檛 landed already: slick mailers from a group calling itself Progressives for Progress, urging votes for a slate of candidates for county executive and county council.

But don鈥檛 be fooled by that name: This is no band of wild-eyed radicals. Progressives for Progress is a new political action committee created and funded completely by real estate developers and other real estate interests that are agitating for significant change in the direction of the county.

鈥淲e are losing ground in the region and we need to make progress,鈥 said Charles Nulsen III, president of Washington Realty Company, a Bethesda-based commercial and residential real estate firm. Nulsen is the chairman of the PAC.

Every election cycle, business leaders, developers and other real estate companies try to influence the outcome of Montgomery County elections 鈥 usually with mixed success. This year, the PAC has raised over half a million dollars, which it is using for mailers and billboards, and it may branch out into other media before the July 19 primaries roll around.

鈥淲e are continuing to do mailers and we will be looking for other ways to communicate with voters,鈥 Nulsen said.

The list of candidates the PAC has endorsed will not surprise anyone who follows Montgomery County politics closely. It aligns fairly neatly, though not precisely, with the candidates who are being supported by business groups and who聽聽by The Washington Post. One mailer refers to its endorsed candidates as 鈥渞eal Democrats.鈥

Progressives for Progress has endorsed wealthy businessman David Blair for county executive, and incumbent Councilmembers Gabe Albornoz, Evan Glass and Tom Hucker for at-large seats, along with newcomer Scott Goldberg, who runs a real estate management business. For district races, the PAC has endorsed Councilmembers Andrew Friedson and Sidney Katz for reelection, along with Gaithersburg-Germantown Chamber of Commerce President Marilyn Balcombe, nonprofit leader Amy Ginsburg, Brian Anleu, chief of staff to the Montgomery County Planning Board, former Planning Board Vice Chair Natali Fani-Gonzalez, and Assistant State Attorney General Dawn Luedtke.

Blair four years ago wound up losing the Democratic primary for county executive to the current incumbent, Marc Elrich, by just 77 votes. Big business groups once again have a lot riding on the Blair campaign.

Nulsen said a core group of PAC members vetted and interviewed several candidates for each of the offices.

One of the incumbent council members who was not endorsed by the PAC, first termer Will Jawando (D), called the group鈥檚 name 鈥渄isingenuous.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 doing exactly what it was intended to do, which is to confuse voters,鈥 said Jawando, who won a grudging endorsement from the Post. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an example of a moneyed interest wanting a particular outcome. At a bare minimum, people should know what money and interest is influencing this.鈥

Nulsen, who has contributed to national Republicans as often as he has given to national and local Democrats, according to聽, a website that tracks money in politics, defended the PAC鈥檚 name.

鈥淚t is a statement that we feel the liberal, progressive wing of the [Democratic] party is not for anything,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e the progressive part of the party that鈥檚 interested in making progress.鈥

Since it started this spring, Progressives for Progress has raised $527,500, according to campaign finance reports. The contributions came from 40 development companies and other real estate entities, or individuals associated with these firms, in donations that ranged from $500 to $50,000.

As of earlier this month, the PAC had spent $175,225 on mailers, $65,099 for billboards and yard signs, and $37,800 on polling. It still had $249,875 on hand earlier this month.

One thing that鈥檚 notable about the list of the PAC鈥檚 favored contenders is that it does not feature a single Black candidate, in a county where about 20% of the population is Black. The current nine-seat council has two African American members; the council is adding two more seats in the upcoming election.

Nulsen said the leadership of the group 鈥渋s color blind鈥 and was simply looking for the candidates who can improve the county鈥檚 business climate.

Any resemblance between this political action committee and a 501c4 education entity known as Empower Montgomery, which was set up by business leaders to influence the 2018 elections, is hardly coincidental. The leadership team is roughly the same. Steve Silverman, a former county councilmember who is now a lobbyist, is advising Progressives for Progress, just as he worked with Empower Montgomery.

Four years ago, a Democratic and union activist in Montgomery County, Brian Kildee,聽聽with the Maryland State Board of Elections, accusing the entity of illegal coordination with the Blair campaign. Kildee argued that Blair was a founder of the group and suggested that Empower Montgomery had misstated its mission in its organization papers. The state board never ruled on the complaint, and Blair has insisted that he was not a founder of the group, though he donated money in 2017.

Elrich has long been an anathema to the real estate development community, and the PAC鈥檚 endorsement of Blair, along with the Post鈥檚 endorsement of the former health care executive, is hardly a surprise. But the Post鈥檚 assessment of Elrich in its Blair endorsement was unusually harsh, which cheered Nulsen and his PAC supporters.

聽Elrich has 鈥渉as mismanaged [the county鈥檚] $6 billion budget and workforce, subverted its prospects of attracting jobs and prosperity, pandered to his narrow political base, and set the county up for failure.鈥

Elrich supporters were stunned that the editorial did not at least mention the executive鈥檚 stewardship during the worst of the COVID-19 pandemic, when public health restrictions were more stringent than just about anyplace else in Maryland.

Whether that editorial backfires and motivates Elrich鈥檚 supporters is an open question. But FAIR, a progressive national media watchdog, recently published a piece about聽, describing him as 鈥渢he country鈥檚 third-most powerful democratic socialist,鈥 behind only Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

鈥淒espite the Post鈥檚 efforts, Elrich narrowly won the county executive seat in 2018,鈥 FAIR wrote. 鈥淎nd now he鈥檚 standing for reelection, with a聽.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 an outcome the Post is determined to prevent, lest Elrich set a dangerous example: that a lefty can not only win, but govern so effectively that voters return him to office.

鈥淔or the Post 鈥 a paper owned by the third-richest human alive, Amazon founder Jeff Bezos 鈥 scaremongering about lefties is job one. On a national level, that鈥檚 led to the Post鈥檚 hysterical coverage. On a local level, it鈥檚 led to the paper鈥檚 attacks on Elrich.鈥

But the Post鈥檚 attacks on Elrich and his allies in Montgomery County politics pre-date Bezos鈥 ownership of the paper. So now he has a progressive national website defending him 鈥 while a faux progressive local group seeks to defeat him.

Disclosure: The Blair Family Foundation was a financial supporter of Maryland Matters in 2020.

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