Despite AG rebuke, aerospace exec and big-time Trump donor Peter Zieve runs for office in Mukilteo – The Seattle Times

The Attorney Generals Office said he fostered a discriminatory company culture. But Mukilteo aerospace entrepreneur Peter Zieve who last year donated $1 million to Donald Trump is now making his own political run.

Last year, Mukilteo aerospace entrepreneur Peter Zieve gave $1 million to support Donald Trumps presidential campaign, becoming one of the New York billionaires top donors nationwide.

This year, Zieve has stepped into politics himself. The 63-year-old founder and president of Electroimpact a major supplier to Boeing and Airbus and employer of roughly 800 people around the world is running for Mukilteo City Council.

It seems like he aims to be the Donald Trump of Mukilteo, wrote local resident Diana Kushner in a letter to the Mukilteo Beacon, one of many Zieves candidacy has generated in the city of roughly 20,000 near Everett.

She noted that he dismisses criticism as fake news, like the president, and last year infamously mailed anonymous postcards alerting city residents to plans for a new mosque.

He has since apologized. But his expression of anti-Muslim sentiments, which for years helped shape Electroimpacts company culture, goes way beyond the postcards and would seem to make him an unlikely political prospect.

In emails circulated at work, he suggested that Middle Eastern refugees are terrorist savages and encouraged his mostly white, male workers to marry and procreate so this country wont be backfilled with rubbish. Those who followed his advice received bonuses.

In March, after the state Attorney Generals Office found that Electroimpact discriminated on the basis of religion and marital status, the company entered into a consent decree that required it to pay $485,000 and take Zieve out of direct hiring.

Some consequently find his council campaign alarming. Hes already created a lot of discord, said Kim Longmore, a local teacher who said she hadnt been political in the past but decided she needed to step things up when she heard Zieve was running.

She wrote a letter to the Beacon calling attention not only to the mosque postcards and the attorney generals finding but to an aspect of Zieves personal life that she and some others cast as disturbing for a candidate whose signs read Elect Zieve for families.

Court and police records show that Zieve and his wife, Mariya Morozova-Zieve, have had volatile arguments over the years, with officers called to their home a half-dozen times, once by a child saying mom and dad were fighting, according to the 2014 police report.

Longmore, who has read the police reports, said its impossible to know the whole story about allegations of aggression by both parties.

What we do know, she said, is that they dont know how to solve things without getting the Police Department involved. If he cant see whats in the best interest of his family, than how is he going to be doing that for our community?

Neither Zieve nor his wife could be reached for comment over the past week.

His estranged sister, Wendy Zieve, calls his campaign kind of bizarre. She referred to what she believes is Electroimpacts desire to keep her brother out of the limelight after the PR nightmare of the past year.

There are other oddities. Mohammed Riaz Khan, head of the group building the mosque Zieve wanted to stop, said his onetime nemesis sought his endorsement, as well as help with mediating his marriage problems.

Zieves and Khans wives have a mutual friend, Khan said. But still, he asked, referring to Zieve and his ironic requests, What kind of person is this?

Khan, who is running for a different council seat Zieve is challenging City Council President Bob Champion for Position 2 said he turned the entrepreneur down on both counts, as he did when Zieve offered a campaign donation.

I dont need it, Khan said he responded. Just wish me good luck, thats all.

Zieve has some prominent endorsements, including current and former local officials. Yet at least two of them arent exactly full-throated.

I endorse everyone that asks me, said Councilmember Scott Whelpley, one backer Zieve lists on his campaign website. Everyone. Its something he does to show he can get along with all sorts.

You understand Im a minority, Peter, Whelpley said he told Zieve when he asked for an endorsement. Whelpley, a Navy veteran, said he looks like a tall white boy, but is half Mexican.

As Whelpley recalled it, Zieve said something like, yeah, OK.

The deal was done, even though Whelpley said he completely disagrees with Zieves views on people of other races and religions. After all, Whelpley said, even Hispanic members of his own family sometimes utter racist remarks.

Whelpley also said he appreciates what Zieve has done for the community, including donating $200,000 for the Boys & Girls Clubs planned construction of a new facility in Mukilteo.

Former two-term Mayor Joe Marine has another reason for his endorsement of Zieve. I felt that I owed him that support, said Marine, explaining that Zieve had always endorsed him and contributed to his campaigns.

Marine, an insurance salesman, said hes gone to some of Electroimpacts elaborate Christmas parties and been impressed by what he saw as a huge family atmosphere. He added that Zieve would bring a business perspective to council.

The only concern I have how do I put this? Hes straightforward in his opinions. On the council, Marine said, you really need to just sit and listen to all sides.

Marine said he also wonders why Zieve would even want to be a council member, a part-time, nonpartisan position that offers a monthly $500 stipend.

I said, Peter, arent you busy enough? Marine recalled. Zieve talked broadly about the city needing help, according to Marine, who was still left guessing. I would assume he probably got upset at something the city was doing or not doing.

The councils recent decision to put a sales-tax increase for transportation improvements on the November ballot certainly irked Zieve. The city needs to learn to live within its means, Zieve says on his campaign site, which also warns of possible hikes in car-tab fees and property taxes. His signs carry the motto: no new taxes.

Zieves website also talks about adding new playgrounds, eliminating permitting requirements for home improvements, and enacting legal force to stop transient and criminal populations from moving into Mukilteo. He draws a distinction between genuine homeless people and people exploiting services for them.

His campaign site does not mention the planned mosque. Zieve told The (Everett) Heraldhe no longer opposes the project.

Still, Tina Over, a real-estate agent who is also vying for Position 2, is skeptical. Referring to the vehemence of his beliefs, she said, You dont change that fast.

Zieve spoke against a resolution put forward at a June council meeting to make Mukilteo a welcoming city to immigrants and minorities a rhetorical measure that carried no policy changes and stopped well short of typical sanctuary city legislation. The meeting was contentious, but Zieve talked only briefly and said nothing memorable, according to Councilmember Richard Emery, who sponsored the ultimately successful measure.

Zieve will have a chance to elaborate on his views at a Monday evening candidate forum at City Hall.

One person who wrote in to the Mukilteo Beacon to support Zieve is his wife.

To police officers and in a 2011 petition for a protection order, Morozova-Zieve, 45, has expressed fear and anger regarding her husband. She said he was cheating on her, called her ugly names in front of the children, repeatedly pushed and grabbed her and, one time in 2011, sprayed Windex in one of her eyes. Zieve told an officer he was aiming for windows, not her, but he was arrested on a misdemeanor assault charge and spent a day in jail.

As recently as February of this year, Morozova-Zieve also was arrested for assault and booked into jail, following a fight in which she allegedly scratched Zieves hand and bit his arm.

Both those cases rare occasions when either party claimed physical violence were dismissed, and Morozova-Zieve emphasized the lack of convictions in her letter to the Beacon.

She also called Zieve a wonderful father to their seven children and stepchildren and touted his commitment to our communitys STEM programs, internship opportunities and monetary donations.

Zieve, in his own letter to the Beacon, seemed to suggest that his family problems were due to a brain tumor his wife has had since 2001, which caused her to lose control of her emotions. Our family is closer together than it has ever been, he wrote.

Zieve has put $50,000 of his own money into the campaign a fortune in Mukilteo politics. That buys a lot of things, said Champion, who also works in aerospace, as a staff scientist specializing in in-flight safety equipment at Honeywell in Redmond. His self-funded campaign war chest totals $5,000.

Even so, Whelpley said he doesnt expect Zieve to get through the Aug. 1 top-two primary, though he noted a faction of people in town quietly agree with Zieve on matters such as immigration.

That may lead to Zieve having something else in common with Trump.

Youre going to be very surprised by how many people vote for him, Whelpley said of Zieve. Youll be shocked.

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Despite AG rebuke, aerospace exec and big-time Trump donor Peter Zieve runs for office in Mukilteo - The Seattle Times

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