This report was published in July 2000. It should be considered outdated and is kept online for historical purposes only.

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Pioneer Profiles: George W. Bush's $100,000 Club
 
Name: Herbert F. Collins
Occupation: Chair, Boston Capital Partners
Industry: Finance
Home: Boston, Massachusetts

  

Political Contributions:
Bush Gubernatorial Races: 
 $6,000
Republican Hard Money: 
$108,419
Republican Soft Money: 
$184,300
Democratic Hard Money: 
$0
Democratic Soft Money: 
$0
Federal PAC Hard Money:
$5,000
Total Contributions:
 $303,719
Soft Money from Employer:
$193,050
to Republicans:
$40,550
to Democrats:
$152,500
Collins, whose real estate financing firm relies on federal contracts and tax credits, is politically hyperactive. As he pressed House Ways and Means Chair Bill Archer to shield a $2.6-billion tax break for his industry in ‘96, Collins led a funding drive for Archer’s son-in-law, who was seeking an Alabama congressional seat. Oddly, donors were urged to send these checks to Bill Archer’s home in Virginia. Collins also led President Bush’s New England campaign in ‘92. He and Boston Capital’s president were accused of exceeding the overall federal cap on political contributions that year by a whopping extra $17,000 each. In an ‘89 revolving-door scandal, Collins’ firm suspended then-Vice President Thomas Demery. When Demery had left his post as assistant secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) three months earlier, his HUD files mysteriously vanished with him. Demery was suspected of—and later pled guilty to— steering HUD subsidies to politically connected developers. As it turned out, Collins entered the revolving door soon after Demery exited. New HUD Secretary Jack Kemp appointed Collins to the Federal Home Loan Bank of Boston in ‘90. Collins and five other Boston Capital executives were big contributors to the campaign of ex-Connecticut Treasurer Paul Silvester, who was convicted in ‘99 for taking kickbacks for investing state pension funds with private investment managers (see Pioneer Wayne Berman).


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