By Steven Rosenfeld
The Republican True the Vote project is a well-funded scheme with training sessions for activists across the country. Will it work?
August 24, 2012 | I was nervous getting onto the flight to Denver. Since 2004, I have been a national radio producer, investigative reporter, author and consultant—writing about how elections are won, lost, bungled and improved, with a big focus on voter registration. But I had never snuck into a meeting of right-wing voting vigilantes who are the frontline of a national voter suppression strategy, and where the main speaker was a man whose new book I’d aggressively debunked days before, in an AlterNet article [3] lauded by a leading election law blog [4] and Washington Post [5]. The meeting was a state summit organized by a group called True The Vote [6]. The author was John Fund, who absurdly claims that more than 1,000 felons voted illegally in Minnesota in 2008, sending Democrat Al Franken to the U.S. Senate, where he was the final vote that passed Obama's health care reform.
I didn’t want to be outed or bullied. I
support citizen activism and was intrigued, even if I knew I was heading
into the heart of the GOP election fraud brigade at the Colorado
summit. On the plane, I wondered why many of the right-wing activists I
hoped to meet in Denver believe as they do—eyeing almost all phases of
the voting process with suspicion and mistaking errors as political
conspiracies. The group’s Web site was very thin, but as knowledgeable
people told me, they had big money behind them and were organizing on a
scale that recalled the early days of the Christian Coalition [7].
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