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In January 2024, real estate heirs Douglas Durst and his cousin, Jonathan, sued No Labels alleging a "bait and switch" scheme had been used to finance their third-party presidential campaign. The Durst family says it has donated to No Labels since 2016, when the group's messaging focused on bipartisan policy legislation, but contend that No ...
No Labels was so incensed by what Page referred to as the anti-No Labels campaign's "little fraternity games" that the group lodged a complaint with the Justice Department. In a letter and an ...
Douglas Durst (born December 19, 1944) is an American real estate investor and developer. He has been the president of The Durst Organization since 1992. Early life and education
Douglas_Durst,_real_estate_mogul.jpg (125 × 180 pixels, file size: 4 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The Rev. Benjamin Chavis, national co-chair of No Labels and a North Carolina-born civil rights activist, explained that the need for No Labels lies in the fact that a majority of Americans are ...
At a meeting on Sunday, the State Board of Elections certified the party, which is called No Labels, in a 4-1 vote. No Labels received almost 15,000 valid signatures from voters in its petition ...
In the 1990s, Durst became estranged from his family after his father entrusted Douglas Durst with taking charge of the family business. He then sued the family and took a $65 million payout in 2006.
Politico reported that the No Labels contracted significant work with firms run by Board President and CEO Nancy Jacobson's husband Mark Penn, awarding two contracts worth nearly $1 million. [1] The organization denied this was improper citing that the rest of the board signed-off on the contracts. [1]