The recent blowing up of the
Invisible Children viral video might have some of us thinking that Malcolm
Gladwell was onto something with his biting
critique of online politics, the so-called "slacktivism"
debate. But the attention to the shooting death of Trayvon Martin and, even
more so, the connected debate over Stand Your Ground gun laws and the
distancing of some of the country's biggest companies from ALEC, the American
Legislative Exchange Council, shows how online organizing actually can work.
And that, reasonably, seems to be causing palpitations in the hearts of
everyone from Coca-Cola to the Koch brothers.
That's why even if, as Politico reports,
the gun debate isn't happening in
Washington ,
the N.R.A. shouldn't be unconcerned.
To itself, ALEC is an
organization dedicated to the advancement of free market and limited government
principles through a unique "public-private partnership" between
state legislators and the corporate sector. To its critics, it's a shadowy
back-room arrangement where corporations pay good money to get friendly
legislators to introduce pre-packaged bills in state houses across the country.
Started in the mid-1970s, ALEC's existence has been long known but its
practices, largely, have not; the group hasn't been eager to tie its bills in Wisconsin to those in Ohio
to those in North Carolina .
Lisa Graves is executive
director of the Center for Media and Democracy, the group that built ALEC
Exposed. She's also a former Justice Department official in both the Clinton
and Bush administrations. Said Graves on a call this week, "We built out
the material using Google, the Internet Archive and the Wayback Machine,
primary records that were previously on ALEC's website, old old Lexis news
clips, and the tobacco library," as in the digital archive run by the
University of California of San Francisco as part of the Tobacco Master Settlement
Agreement of the late '90s. "There was a lot of material out there that
was just not widely known."
Having the bills all in one
place painted a certain picture. "If it's voter ID, it's ALEC,"
observed Doug Clopp, deputy director of programs at Common Cause. "If it's
anti-immigration bills written hand-in-glove with private prison corporations,
it's ALEC. If it's working with the N.R.A. on 'Shoot to Kill' laws, it's ALEC.
When you start peeling back state efforts to opt out of the regional greenhouse
gas initiative, it's ALEC." Adopted first in the states, by the time these
laws bubble up to the national level, they're the conventional wisdom on
policy.
For years, political types
had vague notions of the state-to-state connections, but it was difficult to
see the whole picture. ALEC Exposed launched with a series of companion articles in The
Nation, detailing not only the bills themselves but the involvement of the
Koch brothers, early ALEC funders. Graves said
she was eager to avoid the fate of past interest group reports that focused on
ALEC then sat on shelves, unread. "I know the only way that we could
possibly tell the story of this corporate bill mill across 50 states was to
use, in essence, crowd sourcing that engaged other journalists, citizens,
researchers, and writers."
One group that decided to
jump into the mix was ColorofChange.org. Created in the aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina, the organization is known for its mastery of online organizing. The
ALEC Exposed research was eye-opening, said ColorofChange.org executive
director Rashad Robinson. ColorofChange.org took particular offense at the
spate of voter ID laws that had originated within ALEC. It focused its efforts
at peeling off the corporations taking part in the group.
In early December,
ColorofChange.org sent
out an email to its membership list. "For years," it read,
"the right wing has been trying to stop Black people, other people of
color, young people, and the elderly from voting for partisan gain -- and now
some of America 's
biggest companies are helping them do it." The missive introduced how ALEC
works, detailing the spread of voter ID laws through dozens of states,
including Rhode Island , South
Carolina , Wisconsin , Kansas , and Texas .
The lengthy email was footnoted, meant to be a teaching document.
ColorofChange.org came up
with a strategy. It would start by meeting face-to-face with corporations to
explain to them why their participation in ALEC was troublesome. Some companies
made the case, said Robinson, that they were simply dedicated to making sure
all viewpoints were represented in public debates. "There's no two sides
to black people voting," Robinson said he and his organizers countered.
But always present was the cudgel: the tremendous public attention that
ColorofChange.org could bring to bear with a few clicks. The group claims a
membership of some 900,000 people.
Robinson recalls one meeting
with an executive from Kraft. "I told him there are a lot of ways we can
elevate this issue," said Robinson, laughing. "Black people buy a lot
of macaroni and cheese."
"As we got closer, we
showed them the website that would go live if they didn't pull out. That helped
them understand that we were escalating these conversations from, 'Let's have a
conversation about ALEC because we think you should be making a different
choice' to 'We're going to launch a public campaign if you don't make a
different choice.'" Those not familiar with ColorofChange.org, sad
Robinson, could Google the group and read all about its role in getting Glenn
Beck off the air.
For months, things rolled
along that way. Pepsi dropped out of ALEC. ColorofChange.org used that move to
try to persuade Coca-Cola.
In January, the push against
ALEC got a small bump when Republican Florida state legislator Rep. Rachel
Burgin submitted a bill calling for the federal government to cut corporate tax
rates. Burgin had forgotten to strip the ALEC boilerplate from its top.
Whereas, it read, "it is the mission of the American Legislative Exchange
Council," so on and so forth. Burgin yanked the bill back a day later, but
it was too late. Common Cause researcher Nick Surgey posted
about it on the organization's blog. It got picked up in social media
and joked about on cable news.
Then, on February 26th, 17
year-old Trayvon Martin was shot.
As Matt Stempeck, a
researcher at MIT's Center for Civic Media recently
detailed, the work of getting attention for Martin's case has been
multi-pronged. The Martin family attorney approached the task with savvy,
bringing Al Sharpton down to Florida
to talk about the lack of charges against Martin's shooter. Martin's parents became
vocal advocates, pushing law enforcement to bring charges in the case. A petition also
went up on Change.org, the social organizing platform. Started in 2007,
Change.org has gone through many permutations, cycling through being a
fundraising hub and editorial hub before landing on being a straightforward
petition platform.
But, as Stempeck describes,
Change.org also has a not-so-secret weapon: it has hired some (some say all)
of the best progressive online organizers in the business to help would-be
petitioners figure out how to craft their petitions and who to target with
them. Here, it was the Sanford chief of police,
the state's attorney in Florida 's 4th
district, Florida 's attorney general, and U.S. attorney
general Eric Holder. Change.org also worked on Twitter to get celebrities
engaged on Martin's behalf, prompting bold-faced names like Wyclef Jean, Spike
Lee, and Mia Farrow to tweet about the case. Then the police tapes came out,
revealing more about the encounter between Martin and George Zimmerman, driving
even more social media and generating more traction for the petition.
As it grew to some two
million signatures, the Change.org petition gave tweeters and Facebookers what
they have been proven to crave: something active to link to. That online swell
gave mainstream media a hook for a story of the death of one Florida teenager that was now weeks-old.
But this wasn't just about
Trayvon Martin. It has proven difficult to pinpoint how, exactly, it happened,
but at some point the discussion pulled back from just Martin to the
"Stand Your Ground" law that seemed to have let Zimmerman go home
that night. Upon examination, it turned out that this wasn't just Florida ; Stand Your
Ground had passed in recent years elsewhere. "There was a mystery that
many people encountered," said Graves .
"How did this bill become a law in so many states? How does a bill that
seems to immunize a shooter from even getting before a jury end up introduced
across the country?"
"As they connect the
dots," she explained, "they see more and more dots." As it
turned out the traditional 'Castle doctrine' under U.S.
law had been expanded in Ohio , in North Carolina , in Texas
-- all in all, more than two dozen states.
"Our members started
asking what else could be done," said Robinson. It quickly became
clear that these new guns laws had found their start in ALEC. Because of the
work ColorofChange.org had done on voter ID laws, "our members were
prepared. Our members knew who ALEC was." The angle into the issue
changed, but the end result was the same: the corporations backing ALEC started
rethinking their support.
As so it has gone since.
Recent days have seen major companies like Coca-Cola, Kraft, McDonalds, and
Intuit back
away from the group. The Gates Foundation has said that a contribution to
ALEC targeted at education policy would be its last. The trick, says those
leading the ALEC campaigns, was making what once happened behind closed doors
public, one way or another. Publicity quickly changed the calculation of ALEC's
value.
"Legislators don't want
it to seem like there's a Geppetto to their Pinocchio," said Robinson.
"And companies would much rather run great commercials that make you cry
about their products than have to do ads about changing tax law or against soda
taxes. When ALEC and its relationships are no longer secret and private, is it
still the vehicle that's most beneficial?"
Or, as Common Causes' Clopp
put it, "for 40 years you couldn't get the kind of accountability we're
seeing know because ALEC, its members, its legislators, its bills were
secret."
ALEC, of course, says its
critics are missing the whole point; it's just a forum for the discussion of
free market principles dear to the private sector and to many elected
officials. It's democracy in action. But nearly inarguable is that the recent
attention on the group has pushed it to adapt. ALEC didn't respond to a request
to talk for this piece, other than to pass along a statement. The simple fact,
though, that the group is now making public statements is a sign that ALEC has
been forced into rethinking the way it does business.
ALEC argues all this recent
attention is nothing but a "campaign launched by a coalition of extreme
liberal activists committed to silencing anyone who disagrees with their
agenda." The statement goes on, "Now more than ever, America needs
organizations like ALEC to foster the discussion and debate of policy
differences in an open, transparent way and not fall back on bullying,
intimidation, and threats." And yet, the campaign continues, say ALEC's
foes. Next up: persuading State Farm and Johnson & Johnson to cut ties with
the group. Then they'll go to work on the legislators.
Common Cause's Clopp
imagines a future where bills are digitized and put up online as soon as their
introduced in state legislatures, making it easier to scan for "ALEC
DNA" -- or the boilerplate of any group, for that matter -- even before
bills become law.
That sort of vision has
prompted its own political innovation. The Sunlight Foundation, a group at the
forefront of making legislation digital and public, recently rolled out from
their labs a tool calledSuperfastmatch.
The software lets you do textual analysis of multiple bills, using the
comparisons to track the replication of bills from state house to state house.
It's version control of legislation that makes it possible to figure out where
bills are coming from, even if their sponsors remember to strip off the header
language on them.
For Clopp's part, the lesson
learned from the last nine months is that matching the might of a group like
ALEC takes a critical mass. "You learn to do ego disarmament and say,
'Huh, we're going to need a bigger army, or this is going to be a 30-year
war.'" The coalitions created aren't always your traditional ones.
ColorofChange.org's Robinson credited ALEC Exposed as a tremendous resource. Graves is quick to praise Robinson's group's work. But
the pair had never met in person before a march outside ALEC's D.C.
headquarters two weeks ago.
That it's a dispersed but
networked coalition is meaningful.
Professional Democrats in Washington and in the
states have long cowered in the face of the N.R.A. But there are millions of
other people who aren't afraid of the gun lobby's fundraising might or ability
to target elections -- especially when they're just normal folks, participating
in online politics as part of their routine lives, even if it's only with a
tweet or a signature on an online petition.
"Part of the Internet
age," said Robinson of ColorofChange.org, "is that people want a
chance to be activists on issues. They're not joiners in the same way of,
'Okay, I'm a card-carrying member of this organization and I'm going to be with
it forever.'" People are looking for the vehicle to get done what they want
done, no matter who's presenting them with the opportunity.
The story of ALEC's role in U.S.
politics and government is a complicated one, making the response perhaps
uniquely suited to online organizing. Research and story-telling, once done,
can hang around online until needed. Databases stay at the ready. Dots are
connected as more dots appear. Attention can get channeled and captured. It's
hard, complex work. But it's the hard, complex work that online organizers have
spent the last few years figuring out. That might not have a group like ALEC,
designed to work on its own and on its own terms, scared yet. But it probably
should.
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