Communist organizations appear to be turning to the coercion game just days before the election, with the race becoming more and more determined in a small presidential election.  ,
The notorious Vote Participation Center is being advised by the Maryland Attorney General’s Office to stop sending people mail that” threatening to expose” their election information.  ,
Attorney General Anthony Brown, a Democrat, sent the VPC a cease-and-desist notice after Marylanders complained of receiving the team’s so-called “voting report cards” attempting to pity people into election.  ,
In an effort to encourage election participation, we’re sending this email to you and your companions to communicate who does and does n’t vote. These are your neighbors ‘ real voting data, the mailer warns, though we have kept the name and street amount of your relatives to protect privacy. After the vote, we will be checking these files to see if you joined your neighbors in casting ballots.
In a press release, Brown admonished the voting registration advocate group that “any activity that intimidates potential voters, especially on the eve of such a significant vote, will not be tolerated” . ,
Voting is one of the most significant freedom that Marylanders have, the AG wrote. Maryland voters should be aware that their choice to cast ballots on Election Day is totally ours, let me be clear: these entrancing letters are undesirable.
‘ It’s Truly Gross ‘
The VPC, which bills itself as a “non-profit, non-partisan business” with a goal to “help members of the New American Majority record and vote”, has been using such methods for the better part of two years, said Parker Thayer, analytical scientist at the Capital Research Center. He claimed that the VPC and similar organizations are rarely held accountable. They launch an intimidation campaign using the First Amendment.  ,
Not just the people in Maryland are getting threatening voting messages.  ,
This particular bullying tactic, according to Thayer, has become extremely well-known throughout the election cycle, according to Thayer in a phone interview from Battleground Michigan on Friday afternoon. ” This is a tactic of desperation”.
According to Thayer on X, the leftist group NowThis Impact created a website that teaches users how to” stalk the voting history of an ex, friend, or family member and bully them for not voting.”
” You go to didmyfriendsvote. org, you put in their name, age range, and the place that they’re registered to vote”, a young woman in a video on the site explains. ” As an example, I did my mom, and she’s actually voted quite a bit”.
” But then I did this boy,” I said in college. I thought he was a voter this whole time, and nope! Just keep in mind that there are many barriers to voting, and it’s more challenging for some than others. The young activist yells while pointing her finger at the camera as though this man did n’t have any barriers.” But I will be having a conversation with him.” ” And yeah, babes, just remember that this is a double-edged sword. No one can see who you voted for, but they can see if they did. So if you’re sharing a lot of Instagram graphics, you’d better be backing that sh-t up in November on Election Day” . ,
Thayer claimed that the leftist group NowThis Impact, which advertises itself as a media outlet, is one of several leftist organizations pushing out voter participation threats in an effort to increase voter participation.  ,
” It’s really gross. We’ve heard a lot of bad elections organizations claim they are fighting for democracy while doing everything in their power to make this election as bad as possible, according to Thayer.  ,
Inaccurate and Possibly Confusing
The Voter Participation Center was founded in 2003, starting out as Women’s Voices Women Vote, according to InfluenceWatch, Capital Research Center’s nonprofit tracker.  ,
” The group initially focused on registering the strongly Democratic-leaning voting bloc of single women to vote, today, the group organizes registration of numerous Democratic-leaning voting populations”, InfluenceWatch notes.  ,
The VPC has long operated a direct-mail campaign, targeting “unmarried women, minorities and millennials”, according to InfluenceWatch. With ties to the Clinton Foundation, the Democrat Party, and other leftist groups, the VPC has faced a litany of criticisms, allegations, and charges about unethical, even fraudulent practices.  , In 2020, Fairfax County, Virginia, warned voters” about an inaccurate and potentially misleading mailing from the Center for Voter Information” , , the VPC’s sister nonprofit.
Residents of the county were warned by the group that” this group is mass mailing pre-filled, absentee ballot applications to county voters without their requests,” and that the mailing list includes return envelopes to send the applications to the City of Fairfax, not Fairfax County.  ,
In March, the Alabama Secretary of State advised residents of a “misleading, unsolicited mass mailing of pre-filled voter registration forms targeting Alabama mailboxes”. The results of VPC and the CVI were the mass mailings.
‘ They Do n’t Stop’
This election cycle, the VPC’s threat mailers are popping up all over the nation. I received a” Voting Report Card” at my home in Iowa. One of the VPC’s threatening missives was discovered in my colleague Logan Washburn’s mailbox.  ,
States have pretty straightforward laws on intimidation. While Maryland law allows a requester to receive a copy of the voter registration list, including voters ‘ election participation history, statutes prohibit conduct aimed at influencing or attempting to influence a voter’s decision — “whether to go to the polls to cast a vote, or vote by other lawful means,’ through the use of force, fraud, threat, menace, intimidation, bribery, reward, or offer of reward,'” Brown wrote in his press release.  ,
Brown said that Marylanders have “uniformly described feeling intimidated, threatened, shocked, and ill-at-ease by this mailing, as the letter suggests that there will be follow-up after the election. Maryland and federal laws are both broken by this threat to publicly reveal the recipient’s voting history.
Brown advised the VPC that the leftist organization could face fines and prison sentences if it continued to violate state and federal law until the end of the business day on Friday to confirm receipt of and compliance with the letter.  ,
Thayer does n’t anticipate that the VPC and other leftist activist organizations will soon switch their tactics.  ,
” Those tactics work. They’ve been using them since 2008″, he said. ” It’s been controversial the entire time they’ve done it. They’ve been asked to stop by secretaries of state, by left-wing journalists. They do n’t stop though” . ,
For more election news and updates, visit , electionbriefing.com.
Matt Kittle covers The Federalist’s senior elections coverage. An award-winning investigative reporter and 30-year veteran of print, broadcast, and online journalism, Kittle previously served as the executive director of Empower Wisconsin.