Dependable Erection

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Robo-calls

I've been hearing some talk about these deceptive robo-calls over the past week. Now, it looks like some real journalists are following up.

From Facing South:
Who's behind the mysterious "robo-calls" that have spread misleading voter information and sown confusion and frustration among North Carolina residents over the last week?

Facing South has confirmed the source of the calls, and the mastermind is Women's Voices Women Vote, a D.C.-based nonprofit which aims to boost voting among "unmarried women voters."

What's more, Facing South has learned that the firestorm Women's Voices has ignited in North Carolina isn't the group's first brush with controversy. Women's Voices' questionable tactics have spawned thousands of voter complaints in at least 11 states and brought harsh condemnation from some election officials for their secrecy, misleading nature and likely violations of election law.

First, a quick recap: As we covered yesterday, N.C. residents have reported receiving peculiar automated calls from someone claiming to be "Lamont Williams." The caller says that a "voter registration packet" is coming in the mail, and the recipient can sign it and mail it back to be registered to vote. No other information is provided.

The call is deceptive because the deadline has already passed for mail-in registrations for North Carolina's May 6 primary. Also, many who have received the calls -- like Kevin Farmer in Durham, who made a tape of the call that is available here -- are already registered. The call's suggestion that they're not registered has caused widespread confusion and drawn hundreds of complaints, including many from African-American voters who received the calls.

The calls are also probably illegal. Farmer and others have told Facing South the calls use a blocked phone number and provided no contact information -- a violation of North Carolina rules regulating "robo-calls" (N.C. General Statute 163-104(b)(1)c). N.C. Attorney General Roy Cooper further stated in a recent memo that the identifying information must be clear enough to allow the recipient to "complain or seek redress" -- something not included in the calls.

It is also a Class I felony in North Carolina "to misrepresent the law to the public through mass mailing or any other means of communication where the intent and the effect is to intimidate or discourage potential voters from exercising their lawful right to vote."

Kudos to Chris Kromm for his excellent work on this story. Hillary Clinton supporters aren't going to like his findings.
For such a sophisticated and well-funded operation, which counts among its ranks some of the country's most seasoned political operatives, such missteps are peculiar, as is the surprise expressed by Women's Voices staff after each controversy.

In at least two states, the timing of Women's Voices' activities have raised alarm that they are attempting to influence the outcome of a primary. As we reported earlier, in Virginia, news reports surfaced the first week in February that prospective voters were receiving anonymous robo-calls telling voters that they were about to receive a voter registration packet in the mail.

The timing of the calls was astoundingly off: As the Virginia State Police confirm, the calls were made Feb. 5 and 6 -- about 10 days before the then-critical Virginia primary, but more than two weeks after the deadline for registering in the state had passed (Jan. 14). The Virginia State Board of Elections was deluged with calls by confused voters -- many who were already registered. When they heard the calls from Women's Voices, they feared that they really weren't.

. . .

Some have also questioned the ties between Women's Voices operatives and Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton. Gardner, for example, contributed $2,500 to Clinton's HILLPAC on May 4, 2006, and in March 2005 she donated a total of $4,200 to Clinton, according to The Center for Responsive Politics' OpenSecrets.org. She has not contributed to the Obama campaign, according to the database.

Women's Voices Executive Director Joe Goode worked for Bill Clinton's election campaign in 1992 as a pollster; the group's website says he was intimately involved in "development and implementation of all polling and focus groups done for the presidential primary and general election campaigns" for Clinton.

Women's Voices board member John Podesta, former Chief of Staff for President Bill Clinton, donated $2,300 to Hillary Clinton on April 19, 2007, according to OpenSecrets.org. Podesta also donated $1,000 to Barack Obama in July 2004, but that was well before Obama announced his candidacy for president.

"The reports from other states are very disturbing, especially the pattern of mass confusion among targeted voters on the eve of a state's primary," Democracy North Carolina's Bob Hall tells Facing South. "These are highly skilled political operatives -- something doesn't add up. Maybe it's all well-intended and explainable. At this moment, our first priority is to stop the robo-calls and prevent the chaos and potential disenfranchisement caused by this group sending 276,000 packets of registration forms into North Carolina a few days before a heated primary election. We need their immediate cooperation."


Page Gardner is the founder of Women's Voices. Women Vote. She's attempting to address the controversy over at HuffPo.
We understand concerns have been raised about the source of phone calls placed by Women's Voices, Women Vote. These calls were our sincere attempt to encourage voter registration for those not registered for the general election this fall. We understand North Carolina's primary registration effort deadline was April 11, (other than those participating in early voting who may register and vote at the same time this week). We apologize for any confusion our calls may have caused. Our intent and purpose was solely to call attention to the registration applications we hope will be completed and returned to the Board of Elections office making thousands more North Carolinians participants in one of the most important elections of our lifetimes.

Judging from the comments there, and at BlueNC, among other sites, doesn't look like a lot of people are buying what Ms. Gardner's selling.

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4 Comments:

  • That group was told by TEN other states that what they were doing was either illegal or misleading and they did not change their behavior one iota in response to these complaints -- I don't know how anyone can see that as "well intentioned" an I hope people rip them a new one. At best, they're idiots who were too arrogant to learn the rules about registering voters before they decide to "do good", they committed the classic mistake of not working with other groups -- who could have told them they were being idiots -- and then they dug in and refused to change their plans when they were told outright they were accomplishing the opposite of what they set out to do. They deserve zippo in funding for next year -- I can't fathom such stupidity.

    That rant aside -- good for Durham's own Kevin Farmer, who recognized the call for what it was and started this whole thing, and good for Democracy North Carolina for getting the Attorney General involved and stopping the madness.

    By Blogger Parsnips, at 5:31 PM  

  • Isn't this sort of dirty trick--an attempt at disenfranchising possible minority voters--something out of the "old" Republican playbook?

    Both Democratic candidates say that Dems will support whoever the nominee is. But I'm sorry, knowing this kind of dirty trick may be associated with HRC is going to make that "healing" all the more difficult.

    Did John McCain outsource his election to the DNC?

    Just sayin'!

    By Blogger Tony, at 10:02 AM  

  • I wish they'd go ahead and start putting people in jail over this sort of thing, instead of pooh-poohing it. Then maybe they'd stop.

    By Blogger Joseph H. Vilas, at 10:22 AM  

  • Roy Cooper's on the case!

    By Blogger Barry, at 10:25 AM  

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