Two photos of men in suits having conversations. The man on the left has dark hair and a blue patterned tie. The man on the right has gray hair, a mustache, and an American flag-themed tie, holding documents.
David Zuckerman, left, and John Rodgers. Photos by Riley Robinson and Mike Doughtery/VTDigger

With just over a month to go until Election Day, only one statewide candidate appears to be giving his incumbent opponent a run for his money when it comes to recent campaign fundraising.

According to candidatesโ€™ Oct. 1 campaign finance filings with the Secretary of Stateโ€™s Office, Republican lieutenant gubernatorial candidate John Rodgers raised $59,824 in the past month. That equals nearly half of the total cash the first-time statewide candidate has raised thus far this election cycle: $123,434.

His Progressive-Democratic opponent, incumbent Lt. Gov. David Zuckerman, by comparison, went into this election cycle with a financial leg up, having rolled over $11,158 from his previous campaigns. This cycle to date, he still has Rodgers beat when it comes to cumulative fundraising, raising $192,160 in total.

But since the two candidates last filed campaign finance reports, Rodgersโ€™ donations in the past month were more than double those of Zuckermanโ€™s at $26,967 in September.

Thatโ€™s thanks in large part to a number of large-dollar donations. Despite his direct appeals to working class Vermonters as โ€œthe son of a dairy farmerโ€ on the campaign trail and the debate stage, the vast majority โ€” about 96% โ€” of Rodgersโ€™ dollars raised this month came thanks to donations of $100 or more.

One family, in particular, donated more cash to Rodgers this month than all of his small-dollar donors combined. Four members of the Pizzagalli family โ€” of the South Burlington real estate development group Pizzagalli Properties, LLC โ€” donated $3,000 in total to Rodgersโ€™ campaign in the last month. Cumulatively this election cycle, four members of the family โ€” James, Angelo, Remo and Donna Pizzagalli โ€” together have donated $5,000 to the Democrat-turned-Republican.

The Pizzagallis are not the only real estate developers to back Rodgersโ€™ campaign to unseat Zuckerman. Bissonette Properties of Burlington and former-Republican political candidate Scott Milneโ€™s own Masaii Properties each forked over $1,000 to the Northeast Kingdom Republican. Rodgers also this month accepted donations from the Vermont Automobile Dealers Association ($500), Vermont Fuel Dealers Association ($750) and Casella Associates ($4,000), a real estate holding company owned by principals in Casella Waste Systems, the Rutland-based waste management behemoth.

In comparison, roughly 78% of Zuckermanโ€™s contributions this month came from donations which exceeded $100. While Zuckermanโ€™s own financial disclosures lacked the corporate and special interest donors comparable to those of his opponent, he did receive a number of high-dollar donations which crept up to, or reached, statewide candidatesโ€™ campaign finance contribution limit of $4,480 from a single source.

Carol Boerner, an ophthalmologist from Reading, has donated $4,405 to Zuckerman so far this campaign cycle. Marion Mohri of Wheelock, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel and public health officer, has sent $4,480 to Zuckerman this cycle. And Alison Williams of Miami Beach, Florida has also maxed out her donation limit to Zuckerman this cycle, according to the Oct. 1 report. And Charles Zuckerman of San Francisco wrote a $2,000 check to his brother this month, bringing his contribution total to $2,250 so far this cycle. The Vermont Progressive Party, too, sent $2,500 to their statewide standard bearer this month.

Rodgers, too, is seeing institutional backup. The Orleans County Republican Committee sent $1,000 his way this month, as did the Shelburne GOP. And the campaign of Gov. Phil Scott offered up the governorโ€™s endorsee a $500 in-kind donation for polling.

Rodgers was far from the only candidate to receive such monetary assistance from the incumbent governorโ€™s war chest. Four Republican state Senate candidates whom the governor has endorsed โ€” Scott Beck of Caledonia County, Pat Brennan of the Grand Isle district, Sam Douglass of Orleans County and Chris Mattos of the Chittenden North district โ€” each were bestowed $700 in in-kind donations for polling, according to the Scott campโ€™s own Oct. 1 finance report.

In total, the Scott campaign paid $6,000 last month to the Illinois-based Donโ€™t AFK, LLC polling firm. The governor also in September spent $117,500 on two mass media expenditures as part of his campaign to break the Legislatureโ€™s Democratic supermajority. The campaign paid Williston-based Hen House Media $87,500 to film two television commercials, in which the governor urges voters to elect legislators โ€œwho will actually work with me.โ€ The campaign also sent $30,000 to the Washington, D.C.-based Battleground Strategies for online advertising.

And despite rolling over more than $332,000 from his prior campaigns, the governor is still collecting checks from special interest groups and PACs. Stand for America PAC, founded by South Carolinaโ€™s former-governor Nikki Haley, whom Scott endorsed in her unsuccessful bid for the Republican presidential nomination this year, maxed out its limit of $4,480 to the governor this month. So, too, did the Georgians First Leadership PAC, a PAC founded by Georgiaโ€™s Republican Gov. Brian Kemp.

In total this campaign cycle, the governor has raised $252,070 as of Oct. 1. Thatโ€™s more than $100,000 more than he cumulatively raised by the same time last election cycle, with the campaign reportedly raising $151,414 by Oct. 1, 2022, according to its campaign finance report from the time. 

Previously VTDigger's statehouse bureau chief.