Adfero and Bonnerโs actions are planned and deliberate
You canโt convict someone of a crime unless you can prove that the accused was acting with intent – that they did what they did on purpose. By that standard, Astroturfing specialists at the Washington, D.C., PR firms Adfero Group and Bonner & Associates have demonstrated that they are guilty, even if what they are doing is – at this point – not technically aย crime.
It should be. Because the Astroturfers are subverting democracy. By their own description, the firms are holding the U.S. democratic system up for sale. Theyโre using the old totalitarian tactic of gathering rent-a-crowds to push around politician. And, as Bonner boasts on its own website, they are doing it in a way that that gives them a specific advantage over lobbyists who, thanks to good legislation, would have to declare who was paying theirย bills.
Exhibit A in the case against Bonner is โฆ the Bonner & Associates webpage. Click on this link and you get one of those annoying Flash animations that must run their course before you get any actual useful information. Bonner starts with a screen that says: โGrassroots/Grasstops; Support to help you win.โ And then they show you a series of photos showing, โVeterans groups, community based organizations, seniors groups, religious groups, businesses and business groups, rural group andย minorities.โ
This is Bonnerโs primary point of purchase and theyโre telling you, before you even get to the home page, what they have forย sale.
Similarly, Adferoโs website offers an unselfconscious account of what it means by โGrassroots and grassroots mobilization.โ Adfero promises โan impressive network of national, state and local contacts to deliver your custom-tailored message.โ It has โcontacts on the ground who can conduct intercepts with elected officials at speeches, rallies, local town hall meetings and other events.โ And lest you think that these are real people who are actually, spontaneously and legitimately involved, Adfero makes clear that this is fee-for-service activism. In fact, Adfero notes that its โCost Per Activist (CPA) Recruitment service is a popular tacticโ because โthe client only pays for recruits who undertake a specific client requested action, such as sending a letter to their electedย representatives.โ
There is no pretense that any of the people involved in this process are sincere. Itโs all business. And because itโs โlegalโ โ that is, because Congress has exempted grassroots gamesmanship from the regulations covering other lobbying tactics โ people argue that itโsย โokay.โ
Itโs not okay and it shouldnโt be legal. Politicians started listening to โgrassrootsโ organizations because voters started to punish people who were obviously taking their advice from wealthy lobbyists instead of from constituents. That was never intended as a signal for PR companies to start dressing their corporate clients to look likeย constituents.
These people have been working under cover of darkness since 1995, when they won an exemption from new lobbyist disclosure requirements. A band of conservative groups, led by the Christian Coalition, had argued that forcing Astroturf organizations to acknowledge their funding would amount to an attack on freeย speech.
But weโre not talking about โfreeโ speech. Weโre talking about paid speech. Weโre talking about a concealed opportunity for corporations to pretend public support. Weโre talking about a โCost Per Activistโ strategy that favours rich, self-interested corporations at the expense of the people who they are pretending toย represent.
Weโre talking about an exemption that should be withdrawn, immediately. Astroturfing is wrong. It should beย illegal.
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