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Club Gonzo
Mike Fox Sr.
John Neece
Susan Hammer
John Vidovich
Larry Stone
Susanne Wilson
Other important supporters: The California League of Conservation Voters, U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein and six returning council members.
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The players and pols
backing Ron Gonzales
Beer distributor and philanthropist
Fox, one of the most prolific campaign donors in the South Bay and a member of Gonzales' fundraising committee, worked with Gonzales on the ballpark measure in 1992. Fox is a key player in the current effort to lure the A's to the South Bay.
Director, Building & Construction Trades
The construction union chief is perhaps Gonzales' most unwavering labor supporter. He unsuccessfully lobbied the San Jose City Council six years ago to grease construction for single-family homes in Coyote Valley.
San Jose mayor
After her protégé, Margie Fernandes, dropped from the race, Hammer quickly got behind Gonzales. He's responded by backing the mayor's positions on the proposed Town & Country project and restricting development in the Coyote and Almaden valleys.
Developer and owner of De Anza Properties
Gonzales met Vidovich during his Sunnyvale days, when the developer came to the city with various development proposals. As a county supervisor, Gonzales appointed Vidovich to the county planning commission in 1990. To date, the Vidovich family has donated $3,500 to Gonzales' mayoral campaign.
Tax assessor
Another friend from Gonzales' Sunnyvale days, the two met in 1975 when Stone first ran for the Sunnyvale City Council. According to Stone, "[Gonzales] is a minority candidate for mayor that the business sector trusts. They don't believe he's the stereotypical minority politician that's going to get elected and take the city checkbook to the barrio."
Ex-county supervisor and lobbyist
She worked with Gonzales her final two years on the board. Splits her time between volunteer stints with the YWCA and the United Way and lobbying for developers like Lee Brandenburg.
From the May 7-13, 1998 issue of Metro.