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Push Poll Org To Be Active on Election Day

The biggest right-wing group backing “push poll” calls says it’s targeting calls to “core supporters” on Election Day.

But there’s reason to believe that the group might also use their mighty calling operation for voter suppression efforts, as well.

This morning, The New York Times checked in on Common Sense Ohio, the conservative nonprofit that’s been polling millions of voters in the closest Senate races with questions that lead hard to the right (“do you support medical research experiments on unborn babies?”).

In it, Gabriel Joseph, the proprietor of ccAdvertising, the calling firm hired to make these nasty calls, admits that “his company had tried to reach every home in Maryland.” As the Times points out, there are over two million households in Maryland. The group has also been inundating voters in Montana, Tennessee, Missouri, and Ohio with its poll — targeting the closest Senate races.

Voters in those states can expect to just keep getting similar calls through tomorrow. Zeke Swift, the Executive Director of Common Sense, told the Times that the polls “had identified core supporters, who will receive a reminder call on Election Day.”

ccAdvertising has done more than just help Common Sense identify “core supporters,” of course — they also have a good idea of unfriendly voters, information that ccAdvertising has not hesitated to use in the past, as detailed last month by Mother Jones:

an investigation of a state GOP official by Alaska’s attorney general in 2003 revealed another glimpse of [ccAdvertising’s] playbook. “If they support our candidate, the candidate comes on with a 20-second GOTV thanking them for their vote and asking them to get their friends and family to vote as well,” Joseph wrote in an email to Alaska Republican Party chairman Randy Ruedrich, according to the Anchorage Daily News. “If they support the opponent, we deliver a voter suppression message.”

Update: Not discussed in the Times piece is the fact that Common Sense has not limited their activity to push polls. Mr. Swift told me last week that they’ve also bought radio spots in Maryland, Montana and Ohio, and sent mailers in Maryland, Montana and Tennessee. You can see their Tennessee mailer here; “Bob Corker and Harold Ford are separated by more than their school colors …” We’re eager to see other examples of their work.

Common Sense Issues, Election 2006

Editor & Publisher

Josh Marshall

Managing Editor

David Kurtz

Senior Associate Editor

Paul Werdel

Associate Editor

Sara Libby

Assistant Editor

Igor Bobic

Reporters

Brian Beutler

Carl Franzen

Sahil Kapur

Eric Kleefeld

Eric Lach

Nick Martin

Evan McMorris-Santoro

Ryan J. Reilly

Benjy Sarlin

Front Page Editor

David Taintor

Poll Editor

Kyle Leighton

News Writer

Pema Levy

Video Editor

Michael Lester

Polling Fellow

Tom Kludt

Video Fellow

Clayton Ashley

Research Interns

Michael Brooks

Publishing Intern

Christopher O’Driscoll

Miles Read

General Manager & General Counsel

Millet Israeli

VP, Ad Sales

Bruce Ellerstein

Waldo Tibbetts

Bob Edmunds

Manager, Ad Operations and Sales Support

Versha Sharma

Deputy Publisher

Callie Schweitzer

Director of Technology

Eric Buth

Designer/Developer

Ni Mu

Matthew Wozniak

Tech Fellow

Dennis Cahillane