Steve Bannon, speaking here at the Brian Terry Foundation event at Tucsonโ€™s JW Marriott at Starr Pass in November 2017, has purchased a house in Oro Valley, records show.

Right-wing political figure Steve Bannon has bought a home in Oro Valley, documents filed with the Pima County Recorder show.

An affidavit of property value and other documents say Bannon bought the 4,865-square-foot home on Jan. 31 for $1.55 million.

Bannon put down $350,000 on the Mediterranean style house, at the end of a street alongside one of the townโ€™s golf courses, the affidavit says. The house had gone on sale Jan. 7.

Neither Bannon nor his spokeswoman returned messages seeking comment.

Bannon has longstanding connections to Southern Arizona. He arrived at Biosphere 2 in 1994, working on behalf of chief financier Ed Bass, and became acting CEO of the project that year.

Bannonโ€™s brother, Chris, also became involved in the Biosphere project and settled here. He also owns a home in Oro Valley, county records show.

Steve Bannon, long a leader among right-wing nationalists, became a household name when he took over Donald Trumpโ€™s shaky campaign in 2016 and led it to victory. He was ousted from the Trump White House in August 2017, but he has continued to push Trumpism, first at Breitbart News, and more recently in a daily podcast called War Room.

Bannon has made frequent appearances at political events in the Tucson area. In 2017, he received an award from the Brian Terry Foundation at the Marriott Starr Pass resort, drawing a crowd of protesters.

In 2019, Bannon joined Brian Kolfage and others at Quail Creek in Sahuarita to launch a nationwide fundraising campaign for the We Build the Wall effort to build a privately funded border wall.

Bannon, Kolfage and two others were indicted the next year on felony counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering for misusing the money raised. Trump pardoned Bannon the last day of his presidency.

In October 2021, Bannon was the headliner for a Lincoln Day fundraiser for the Pima County GOP. It took place at the Hilton El Conquistador, not far from Bannonโ€™s new home.

The next month, Bannon was indicted on charges of contempt of Congress, for refusing to comply with a subpoena from the committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. He still faces those charges.

In January, the Daily Beast reported that Bannon had sought a loan against a Connecticut property previously owned by a nonprofit he is linked to, the Rule of Law Society, although that group no longer owned the $1.4 million property. Bannon listed that same Connecticut address on the affidavit filed with the Pima County Recorderโ€™s Office Jan. 31.

- Tim Steller </&h6>

Chamber backs Tucsonโ€™s Prop. 411

The Tucson Metro Chamber endorsed Proposition 411 this week, an upcoming ballot initiative thatโ€™s expected to generate about $740 million to repair city streets and add roadway safety features like upgraded traffic signals.

Voters will decide in May whether to authorize the initiativeโ€™s half-cent sales tax to fund the work over the next 10 years. Itโ€™s an extension of a soon-to-expire 2017 ballot measure called

Proposition 101

.

The chamber โ€” an advocacy and community development organization that represents thousands of businesses in the region โ€” is asking Tucsonans to vote โ€œyesโ€ on the initiative, saying itโ€™s an investment that needs to be made sooner rather than later.

Proposition 411 โ€œwill save taxpayer dollars in the long run,โ€ the chamber said in a statement. โ€œThe longer we wait to fix our roads, the more expensive the repairs will cost.โ€

The chamber said increased road repair efforts are critical because 85% of Tucsonโ€™s residential streets are in โ€œpoor or in failing condition,โ€ according to ratings by independent road engineers.

The statement went on to say that Tucsonโ€™s deteriorating roads also have a significant impact on the local economy and business operations because of issues like shipment delays, which the advocacy group said can be mitigated through Proposition 411โ€™s investment in repavement.

โ€œImprovements to our roads are in direct support of our regionโ€™s economic vitality because traffic congestion delays appointments and deliveries,โ€ the organization wrote. โ€œAccording to a U.S. Chamber study, small, onsite service providers, such as plumbers, schedule fewer service calls, resulting in less revenue. Large businesses, such as UPS, have delivery drivers waiting extra time, resulting in an annual cost of $114 million.โ€

The chamberโ€™s statement will be included in the city of Tucsonโ€™s publicity pamphlet ahead of the May 17 special election. The pamphlet will also contain arguments for and against Prop. 411 submitted by numerous other local organizations.โ€”Sam Kmack</&h6>

Contact columnist Tim Steller at tsteller@tucson.com or 520-807-7789. On Twitter: @senyorreporter


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Contact columnist Tim Steller at tsteller@tucson.com or ​520-807-7789. On Twitter: @senyorreporter