Follow the money in St. Louis, and a clear pattern emerges within the $3 billion Midtown data center approval. This high-stakes project, unanimously approved by the Board of Public Service on April 21, 2026, demonstrates how campaign finance, developer interests, and political decision-making converge in major urban development (source).

The project’s largest boosters have provided substantial campaign funding to Mayor Cara Spencer, injecting campaign finance debates directly into the heart of St. Louis city politics.


Campaign Finance and the Midtown Data Center: Key Figures and Flows

Large campaign finance flows set this $3 billion data center apart. Leading donors include:

  • Bob Clark (Clayco founder): $111,000+ to a Spencer-aligned PAC (the highest single contribution of the cycle)
  • Jerald Kent (TierPoint/Cequel 3 executive): Tens of thousands to pro-development and mayoral PACs, plus maximum direct contributions
  • Rodney H. Thomas (THO Investments): Five-figure PAC donation tied to the Armory and the data center location

These public campaign finance records connect the data center’s supporters directly to Mayor Spencer’s 2025 campaign (campaign finance reference).


Transparency, Public Interest, or Political Payback?

City Hall’s unanimous approval draws scrutiny. Is St. Louis government serving the public interest or rewarding political donors? The monetary support from key developers like Bob Clark, Jerald Kent, and Rodney Thomas raises persistent concerns over transparency in campaign finance and local politics.

IssuePublic InterestCampaign Finance Influence
Project Approval SpeedStandardAccelerated
Community InputModerateLow
BeneficiariesBroadDonor-focused

Who Benefits? Community or Campaign Backers?

The size of the Midtown data center means major impact: tax revenue, jobs, and development. Yet, the “follow the money” evidence makes it urgent to ask if these benefits reach ordinary St. Louisans—or primarily those who invested campaign finance into Mayor Spencer’s political future.

For a broader view on local development and transparency in St. Louis, see The Narrative Matters – Tishaura Jones Raises Minimum Wage in St. Louis.


Accountability and Transparency in City Development

Transparency is essential when campaign finance and public policy intersect. St. Louis residents deserve public records clarity, clear separation of campaign finance from public decision-making, and answers about who truly benefits from this billion-dollar development.

  • Demand independent audits on City Hall decisions
  • Support public access to all campaign finance data
  • Advocate for a community advisory board on future high-value projects

For nationwide campaign finance best practices, visit OpenSecrets.org.


St. Louis Must Follow the Money in Data Center Politics

Campaign finance has shaped the Midtown data center’s approval and the broader narrative around St. Louis urban development. Residents and watchdogs must continue to follow the money, ask tough questions, and push for transparency. Public trust requires it.

#FollowTheMoney #StLouisPolitics #UrbanDevelopment

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