Mario Mcintosh donates $1,000 to Stephanie D. Coleman’s election campaign

Mario Mcintosh donates ,000 to Stephanie D. Coleman’s election campaign
0Comments

Mario Mcintosh donated $1,000 to Stephanie D. Coleman’s election campaign committee, Friends of Stephanie Coleman, on Oct. 31, according to records obtained from the Illinois State Board of Elections (ISBE).

In addition to this contribution of $1,000 to Stephanie D. Coleman, records show that Mario Mcintosh has made four other contributions of $1,000 or more in the past five years. Here are other large contributions they have made since Jan. 1, 2016.

Candidate Committee Date Amount
Preckwinkle for President June 25, 2019 $1,000
Gery Chico for Mayor Feb. 19, 2019 $1,000
Toni For Chicago Jan. 18, 2019 $1,000
Friends of Richard Boykin March 8, 2018 $1,000

The ISBE reports the following ten largest contributions to candidates for political office in Illinois in the past 12 months:

Donor Candidate Party Date Amount
William Conway Bill Conway Democratic Feb. 26, 2020 $3,000,000
William Conway Bill Conway Democratic Jan. 30, 2020 $2,650,000
William Conway Bill Conway Democratic Jan. 2, 2020 $2,350,000
JB Pritzker JB Pritzker Democratic June 26, 2020 $1,200,000
JB Pritzker JB Pritzker Democratic Nov. 21, 2019 $1,000,000
JB Pritzker JB Pritzker Democratic June 1, 2020 $850,000
William Conway Bill Conway Democratic Dec. 5, 2019 $800,000
William Conway Bill Conway Democratic Nov. 22, 2019 $550,000
JB Pritzker JB Pritzker Democratic Oct. 21, 2020 $500,000
JB Pritzker JB Pritzker Democratic Sept. 21, 2020 $500,000


Related

Brandon Johnson Mayor

Chicago mayor launches ‘Repair Chicago’ initiative to discuss reparations

Mayor Brandon Johnson launched ‘Repair Chicago,’ a new initiative inviting residents to share experiences related to harm and reparations. Critics urge that current educational challenges caused by CTU leadership should be included in these discussions. The debate centers on how both historical and present-day issues affect families across Chicago.

Cardinal Blase J. Cupich of Chicago

Archdiocese says Chicago Public Schools abruptly cut disability services to Catholic students

The Archdiocese of Chicago said more than 800 students with disabilities in Catholic schools will lose federally funded instructional support after Chicago Public Schools abruptly terminated services ahead of schedule.

Kelly Cassidy, State Representative

Illinois lawmaker introduces bill to ban police use of facial recognition technology

Illinois State Representative Kelly Cassidy has introduced a bill seeking to ban police use of facial recognition technology during investigations. Supporters cite concerns about accuracy while critics warn it could hinder solving crimes like the recent murder case involving Sheridan Gorman.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Chicago City Wire.