Was Clinton campaign targeting black voters with deceptive calls?

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Posted May 5, 2008 | 04:17 AM (EST)



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The Economist recently reported, along with other news outlets, how a women's organization loosely affiliated with the Clinton campaign was making deceptive phone calls to black voters designed to fool them into believing that they weren't registered. Last Wednesday, facing mounting outrage from the Obama campaign and voting rights activists, the North Carolina attorney general ordered the organization, Women's Voices, Women Vote, to stop the practice. The Economist, not known as a leftist magazine, summarized the situation in a scathing commentary on April 30th:

A group called Women's Voices Women's Vote (WVWV), which claims to have been "created to activate unmarried Americans in their government and in our democracy" has been placing robocalls to voters across North Carolina that seem designed to fool them into thinking they have not yet registered to vote. Many of the voters who received those calls are black. Voters in 11 states have complained about similarly deceptive calls and mailings that have been traced back to WVWV this primary season.

Guess which Democratic candidate WVWV's founder and president, Page Gardner, has donated $6,700 to (hint: it's not Barack Obama). Guess whose election campaign Joe Goode, WVWV's executive director, worked for (hint: it was in 1992, and it was a winning campaign). Guess whose chief of staff sits on WVWV's board of directors (hint: it was the president who served between two Bushes). And guess whose campaign manager was a member of WVWV's leadership team (hint: it's Hillary Clinton).

It's an odd story: a recording of someone named Lamont Williams calls voters to tell them a voter-registration packet is on its way. It's unclear whether anything arrives; what isn't unclear is that the call is well after the registration deadline. It's not too hard to imagine this call coming to an unsophisticated voter (and let me make this clear: I am in no way saying black voters, who seem to have received the lion's share of the calls, are all unsophisticated; I'm simply positing a scenario), and that voter becoming confused. Perhaps he thinks he's not registered, and calls his state's board of elections who tells him it's too late so he stays home on election day. Perhaps the board of elections doesn't know what he's talking about, and he gets frustrated and stays home, assuming he's unregistered.

If this were a one-time event, I might be less suspicious, but it's happened in state after state, always after the registration deadline has passed, and always shortly before the primary. This is an organisation stuffed with Washington insiders; incompetence like this simply doesn't happen over and over again, not in the same way like this. Something stinks.

Again, perhaps if the Clinton campaign hadn't shown itself to be quite so sleazy (remember those photos of Barack Obama in Somali garb?); perhaps if the calls weren't going to the constituency least likely to vote for Mrs Clinton; perhaps if Mrs Clinton's supporters weren't so heavily represented among WVWV's board, it wouldn't set off as many bells as it does. But something isn't right here, and it's not a simple error either. As a scam, it seems just Rube Goldberg-ish enough to provide plausible deniability for anyone involved, but just authoritative enough to work on some voters. If it does trace back to Mrs Clinton's campaign, it will provide further evidence that her cronies have abandoned every shred, everything that ever got them into politics in the first place. The end (Mrs Clinton's victory) will justify the means. From flower children of the 1960s to deceivers of black voters in North Carolina in 2008. A long, strange trip indeed.

If these concerns are valid, then it's particularly disturbing that they're coming from Clinton's campaign. She's a Senator who sponsored a "Count Every Vote Act," but now seems to be borrowing a page from the Justice Department's vote-suppression playbook targeting blacks.

So tell me again why is it unfair to compare the tactics of Hillary and her supporters to those of Karl Rove?
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You can hear more about this year's election controversies, voting rights and the latest political trends on "The D'Antoni and Levine Show" every Thursday at 5:30 p.m., EST, at www.blogtalkradio.com.

 
 

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- douglaswylie See Profile I'm a Fan of douglaswylie permalink

As reported in Salon, there is an elected Obama delegate on the board of Women's Voices. Women's Vote. There is no Clinton conspiracy here.

The real story is the speed with which Obama played the race card on this, issuing a press release on Friday.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 PM on 05/05/2008
- ncvoter See Profile I'm a Fan of ncvoter permalink

Bill's former chief of staff and Hillary's former chief of staff work are on the BoD of Women's Voices, Women Vote. This non profit also has the odd habit of hiring its BoD member's companies. NPR has the organizational chart for "Women's Voices, Women Vote"
http://www.npr.org/news/images/2008/may/01/wvwvchart.html

In the complaint filed by the NC NAACP:

Calls made by an African American man, who identified himself as Lamont Williams (hereafter "Lamont") gave the following message to other homes:

"Hello. This is Lamont Williams. In the next few days, you will receive a voter-registration packet in the mail. All you need to do is fill it out, sign it, date and return your application. Then, you will be able to vote and make your voice heard. Please return your registration form when it arrives. Thank you." According to WVWV, "Mr. Williams is a professional voice talent," and his calls only went to men and a woman was used to contact women."

Lamont's calls tell people that are registered that they are not and that the only way they can vote is to wait a few days, get a form in the mail, fill it out and mail it back in.
NC allows same day registration during early voting, but the anonymous robo calls didn't mention that.
Report these calls at 1-866-OUR VOTE
more http://southernstudies.org/facingsouth/2008/05/nc-naacp-files-formal-vote-suppression.asp

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:58 PM on 05/05/2008
- shimane See Profile I'm a Fan of shimane permalink

Last I knew the Economist probably is not the last word in American political insight.

I don"t have a dog in this fight.

I fight political robocalls made by both sides and have testified in front of the U.S. Senate (Sen. Feinstein) about the impact on the voter. (Testimony at: http://rules.senate.gov/hearings/2008/022708hrg.htm)

I testified with the AG of NC, Cooper.

The WVWV story has nothing there. There is no there, there.

Bottom line:

Every political robocall breaks the law in NC (no one gives the voter a way to opt out of future calls, few actually identify who sponsored the call)

This is a case of timing and incompetence, not some sinister "Clinton" plot.

Salon.com has a great take on the WVWV story at the following link:

http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/2008/05/02/robocalls/index.html

As does the Washington Post:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/03/AR2008050301870.html

The real story is how campaigns refuse to honor the federal do not call list and invade the privacy of all American voters.

Campaigns have outsourced campaigning to: TV, radio, the internet and robo calls.

Here is my op-ed on this issue in the Politico last week:

Politico.com - http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0408/9978.html

--
Cheers,

Shaun Dakin " CEO & Founder
The National Political Do Not Contact Registry
Register Your Phone Number Now for Free: http://www.StopPoliticalCalls.org/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 PM on 05/05/2008
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