Marjan Philhour in a TV ad, alleged by the Harvey Milk LGBTQ Democratic Club to be a contravention of campaign law
Marjan Philhour in a TV ad, alleged by the Harvey Milk LGBTQ Democratic Club to be a contravention of campaign law because it was paid for by two separate committees.

The Harvey Milk LGBTQ Democratic Club, a chartered chapter of the local Democratic Party, filed an ethics complaint against District 1 supervisorial candidate Marjan Philhour today, alleging that she misspent campaign funds and violated campaign-contribution limits.

Philhour denied any wrongdoing, and said the complaint was a last-minute attempt to muddy the waters before the March 5 election.

“My campaign is in full compliance with state and local law,” she said. “These allegations are a desperate 11th-hour attempt by a political machine that is out of touch with everyday San Franciscans and has hurt our neighborhoods.”

Philhour, while running for supervisor in November’s election, is also seeking a seat on the Democratic County Central Committee, the San Francisco chapter of the Democratic Party, this Tuesday.

The Milk Club filed its complaint with the San Francisco Ethics Commission this morning, alleging that Philhour mixed her campaign funds: She has spent dollars from her Democratic Central County Committee race to benefit her supervisorial race, the complaint alleges, and vice versa. This commingling of funds, they allege, creates an end-run around San Francisco’s campaign-contribution limits.

If the complaint is substantiated, Philhour could lose public financing for her supervisorial race, and face a hefty fine up to triple the value of the allegedly improper spending.

While candidates for supervisor have strict $500 campaign contribution limits and cannot accept funds from corporations, candidates for DCCC can accept unlimited donations, including from corporations. 

Philhour has amassed a six-figure sum for her Democratic Central County Committee race: $245,000, according to ethics filings, the second-most of any of the 51 contenders in the race. 

The Milk Club is a political opponent of Philhour’s. Philhour is running for DCCC on the San Francisco Democrats for Change slate, but the club has endorsed the rival Labor and Working Families slate.

Philhour is also running this November against Supervisor Connie Chan, the District 1 incumbent. It is the third time Philhour has run for the district seat: She lost in 2016 to Sandra Lee Fewer, and again in 2020 to Chan, by 125 votes.

The Milk Club complaint lists 36 instances in which it alleges that Philhour flouted campaign laws, including TV ads, a website, and “get out the vote” events paid for by both campaigns. Today’s complaint also charges that staff members paid by the DCCC campaign seemingly also worked on the supervisorial campaign.

“I would say that this is not only the most blatant, but defiant violation of the campaign-finance ordinance. While candidates for supervisor have run for DCCC before to get name recognition, never have they been so blatant before as to put on their campaign materials, ‘Paid for by Marjan for Supervisor’ and ‘Paid for by candidate for DCCC,” said Paul Melbostad, an attorney and member of the Milk Club who sat on the San Francisco Ethics Commission from 1995 to 2003.

“Clearly she’s commingling funds, which is significant, because there’s no contribution limit to DCCC elections,” he added.

Philhour countered that she was, in fact, punctilious: The disclosure of spending by both campaigns was her attempt to detail all expenditures to ensure everything is above-board.

And Jim Sutton, a preeminent campaign finance lawyer in San Francisco, agreed with the candidate.

“I don’t think that’s enough to justify the Ethics Commission looking at it,” he said of the allegations against Philhour, speaking generally but without reviewing them in detail. (Sutton has donated $600 to Philhour in past elections.)

He said that as long as expenses are “truly split in half” between campaigns, it is common practice to have one campaign pay for a portion of an ad, for instance, and another campaign pay for the rest.

Still, Sutton said, questions about improper spending by candidates running for both DCCC and supervisor will remain a fixture of San Francisco politics as long as the “loophole” allows candidates to raise unlimited funds for one race and gain name recognition for another.

“This is going to keep on going. Everyone’s doing it; everyone’s trying to push the envelope,” he said. To candidates, his advice was: “You need to pay attention. This is a loophole. It is, and it could be a big electoral advantage, so you have to dot your i’s and cross your t’s.”

In this case, Sutton felt Philhour had adequately done this. 

This is the second ethics complaint filed against a candidate for supervisor this week, following an allegation made Wednesday against Bilal Mahmood, who is running in District 5 to unseat Supervisor Dean Preston. Mahmood was also accused of using DCCC funds to bolster his supervisor campaign; Sutton, for his part, felt the complaint against Mahmood was plausible.

Mahmood, who is also running for Democratic Central County Committee, has fundraised the most of any DCCC candidate at $250,000.

Both Philhour and Mahmood are on a slate of DCCC candidates hoping to take over the body, which progressives have controlled for eight years. Their Democrats for Change slate has outraised its rivals some 3-1, largely taking funds from big-money tech donors who are also funding a loose-knit coalition of candidates and nonprofits hoping to curtail progressive power in 2024.

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Joe was born in Sweden, where half of his family received asylum after fleeing Pinochet, and spent his early childhood in Chile; he moved to Oakland when he was eight. He attended Stanford University for political science and worked at Mission Local as a reporter after graduating. He then spent time in advocacy as a partner for the strategic communications firm The Worker Agency. He rejoined Mission Local as an editor in 2023.

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7 Comments

  1. I voted for her.

    This is just the Chesa Boudin class of politician trying to smear everyone who is against crime.

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  2. This woman is running again after losing twice and for some reason tech is giving her a bunch of money to do so. I wonder why…..

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  3. Did not vote for Philhour or Mahmood. And we need to let these big money bros know we do not want them running SF.

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  4. From the Ethics complaint against Marjan Philhour: “This is not an innocent mistake by a first-time, inexperienced candidate, lacking enough funds to hire a professional campaign who would be knowledgeable of both the letter and the spirit of the Campaign Finance Ordinance. Marjan Philhour ran for Board of Supervisors twice before, in 2016 and 2020, before and this current cycle 2024. She ran for Democratic Central Committee in 2016 as well as this current cycle 2024. She cannot credibly claim she did not know of the Code and Regulations.”

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  5. Marjan Philhour learned lots of dirty tricks in the many years she worked for Mayor London Breed at the highest level at City Hall. Never forget: Marjan is a crony and rubber stamp for Breed. She is a 3 time loser in her run for supe. Will a fourth loss send her back to lobbying for pointless recalls, market rate development and private schools? Girl is out of touch.

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  6. Wow,

    Congrats again on getting Jim Sutton as a source.

    He used to sit in the audience at every single meeting of the Ethics Commission for years when it was a puppet of the Burton/Brown machine.

    He was always their top gun.

    When Dede Wilsey and Warren Hellman promised they’d pay for an underground parking lot at the ‘Aircraft Carrier’ looking new museum in the Park, Sutton rep’d them.

    They never paid.

    You did.

    But, the lot is still Private.

    Good find.

    Just reserved my seat at Secret Location for Katie Porter’s Sunday aft. event.

    Wonder if I can take my dog ?

    On the story, why does the expression, “commingling of funds” sound sexual to me ?

    lol

    h.

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  7. Staying with english language sounds,

    Had a friend who used to talk about words that were about bad things but sounded beautifully like (to her) … incestuous …

    Playing with Joe’s ‘commingling’ how about to describe Sutton’s moves with some added alliteration …

    How about ? …

    The seeming sinisterly slightly incestuous ‘commingling of funds’ for furtherance of fraudulent facades.

    Here for a rainy friday night on March 1st in SF with ten feet of snow expected in the Sierras I recall my favorite piece of alliteration.

    See if this doesn’t sound like the sea itself …

    “The white foam flew.

    A fair breeze blew.

    The furrow followed free.

    We were the first …

    that ever burst …

    into that silent sea.”

    Who wrote that ?

    h.

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