July 17, 2009 12:30 PM

Conservative Group Sought $2M Endorsement

By
Prerana Swami
(The Politico)  This story was written by Mike Allen.


The American Conservative Union asked FedEx for a $2 million check in return for the group's endorsement in a bitter legislative dispute, then flipped and sided with UPS after FedEx refused to pay.

In return for the $2 million, ACU offered a range of services that included: "Producing op-eds and articles written by ACU's Chairman David Keene and / or other members of the ACU's board of directors. (Note that Mr. Keene writes a weekly column that appears in The Hill.)"

The conservative group's remarkable demand - black-and-white proof of the longtime Washington practice known as "pay for play" - was contained in a private letter to FedEx that was provided to POLITICO.

The letter exposes the practice by some political interest groups of taking stands not for reasons of pure principle, as their members and supporters might assume, but also in part because a sponsor is paying big money.

Maury Lane, FedEx's director of corporate communications, said: "Clearly the ACU shopped their beliefs and UPS bought." In the three-page letter asking for money on June 30, the conservative group backed FedEx. Rebuffed, the group signed onto a two-page July 15 letter backing UPS.

American Conservative Union's logo is at the top, along with those of six other conservative groups.

FedEx and UPS, fierce competitors in the package delivery business, are at war over a provision under consideration in Congress that would expand union power at FedEx. Right now, FedEx has one national union contract for its express business.

Under a change passed by the House and awaiting action in the Senate, FedEx - like UPS - would have to negotiate union contracts for individual locations, which FedEx claims would make it impossible to promise worldwide regularity for deliveries.

The American Conservative Union, which calls itself "the nation's oldest and largest grassroots conservative lobbying organization," took UPS's side on Wednesday as part of a conservative consortium that accused FedEx of "misleading the public and legislators."

Just two weeks earlier, ACU had offered its endorsement to FedEx, saying in a letter to the company: "We stand with FedEx in opposition to this legislation." But there was a catch - an expensive one. ACU asked FedEx to pay as much as $3.4 million for e-mail and other services for "an aggressive grassroots campaign to stop the legislation in the Senate."

"For the activist contact portion of the plan we will contact over 150,000 people per state multiple times at a cost of $1.39 per name or $2,147,550 to implement the entire program," the letter says. "If we incorporate the targeted, senator-personalized radio effort into the plan, you can figure an additional $125,000 on average, per state" for an estimated 10 states. The total would be $3,397,550."

The letter shows one reason why activists get so much junk mail, both on paper and electronically: Some groups that send it charge handsomely for the service.

Under the grassroots program ACU proposed, "Each person will be contacted a total of seven times totaling nearly 11 million contacts total in the ten targeted states."

"Within 72 hours of an agreement on the whole plan we can have the data sets delivered and the first round of email ready for delivery," the offer states. "Within 7 days the mail can be in the USPS system and the phone call delivered."

Lane, the FedEx official, said the offer was refused.

"The proposal didn't fit with our strategy of taking a straightforward approach to discussing the issue," he said.

After the rebuff, American Conservative Union changed sides, and now is publicly backing UPS.

ACU Chairman David A. Keene was one of eight conservative leaders who signed a letter dated Wedneday to FedEx Chairman Frederick W. Smith, a champion of capitalism who in the past has been a favorite of conservatives. The letter accused FedEx of "falsely and disingenuously" labeling the rules change a "bailout" for UPS, since FedEx would become subject to the same arduous union structure.

The second letter is also signed by Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform, who is also on ACU's board. FedEx is pushing its case with a website called www.BrownBailout.com.

The letter signed by the conservative leaders concludes: "To paraphrase the words of Ronald Reagan, 'Mr. Smith, tear down this website.'" Keene did not return a message left on his cell phone. The group's executive vice president, Dennis Whitfield, did not return a message left on his cell phone. A call to the group on Thursday afternoon was returned by a woman who said the organization's leaders were traveling, and that someone would call back. POLITICO will add ACU's response when it is provided.

Among the services ACU had offered to provide for the $2 million price tag:

--Acquiring data of known conservatives in the targeted states (to be determined by FedEx), matching that data to an email database and then incorporating those email addresses with the current ACU e-mail database to create one targeted database of all potential activists.

--Sending a piece of targeted direct mail to these potential activists to ensure that they are well educated prior to their contact with their senators.

--E-mailing the identified voter activists, in 5 rounds, in order to educate them on the issue(s) and to urge them to call their senators based on key dates. The ACU would include the phone number of their personal Senators directly in the correspondence.

--Conducting targeted phone call campaign that will contact each voter activist to urge them to make a personal call to their Senators. Each state would have a specialized message just for that state.

--Encouraging activists who live within 30 miles of a senator's District Office to consider making a personal visit to register their concerns at the office. ACU has proven that we can turn out well-informed, quality voters who present a good image to represent our concerns.

--As the vote for the legislation nears, distributing ACTION ALERT emails, and after the vote has taken place, distributing MegaVote e-mails to ACU's members letting them know how their senators vote.
By Mike Allen

The Politico
Add a Comment See all 15 Comments
by AverageJoeLE July 20, 2009 9:50 AM EDT
As a conservative, it kills me to see how the American Conservative Union is totally a sellout. But evidently, this sort of phoniness has been going on for a while. A writer, "JFK" wrote an article I saw last night about his time working at ACU and how they often changed their position to match a crowd: http://******/s1ojC . This seems like the next logical step.
Reply to this comment
by jmikey54 July 19, 2009 3:10 PM EDT
The truth about how some in the right wing conducts business like this will come out. If I were a right wing activist I would be feeling like a dupe. This is one of the reasons you need to educate yourself about an issue before you take a stand. If you know all the facts before blindly following nutcases like Limbaugh, Newt Gingrinch, or Dick Cheney maybe you can avoid foot in the mouth disease. Obama is trying to get the country back to a sound financial footing while at the same time providing the services for our citizens that we need and expect. This is a hard job, especially when you have groups who only support the side who offers them the most money.
Reply to this comment
by prohb July 17, 2009 6:03 PM EDT
The conservatives want Obama and this country to fail.
They do not work within the framework of reality to make this country work.
Their answer - complain and buy guns, get ready for Armageddon when everything breaks down (which they fervently hope and will not lift a finger to prevent). Their way will lead to a society of thugs and strongmen controlling dwindling resources.
They don't want to do the hard work of working together, problem-solving, wise use of resources, and being resilient.
The rest of us have to be proactive try to work around them by
getting involved in our community to help people thru these tough times - like time-banking and (I can't believe conservatives have turned this into a negative!) community service...whatever happened to the "barn-raising" ethos???
Reply to this comment
by cydygitt1 July 17, 2009 4:58 PM EDT
Benton09 says:
"Yowza Boss....Us Suthern-ners don't know nuthin. We just gonna let you edyumicated blue bellies tell uz poor peoples down here howz to do it."
--------------------

Yep.....we certainly know that you southern, white evangelicals know absolutely 'nuthin,' and only live immoral and hypocritical lives waiting for your next welfare check while humping your bible.

Certainly is amazing exactly how backwards the foxnewsus propagandus homosapien subspecies really is, and how they consistently vote against their best interests! Must be that southern incest.
Reply to this comment
by 6591Hou July 18, 2009 10:40 PM EDT
Okay..this is too easy to pass up - LBJ came from Texas, Jimmy Carter came from Georgia, Bill Clinton came from Arkansas, is that the south you are alluding too?
All of this Red/Blue state nonsense is what keeps us from telling our elected politicians what to do, and keeps us talking about what they choose to do.
by jmikey54 July 19, 2009 3:12 PM EDT
your sick
by canislupus16 July 17, 2009 2:46 PM EDT
Don't just whine about this, provide feedback to UPS with your wallet. I already emailed UPS and, besides a few choice comments, informed them that they have lost my business. As little as it is, they won't be going bankrupt any time soon (in the financial sense; morally they are already there), but it's a small little moral victory for myself.

Same with Verizon and AT&T and warrantless wiretaps - never had AT&T but did have Verizon, although I had already dropped Verizon after it came out they made a big defense fund contribution to Tom DeLay after he left the House and was facing the Texas indictment. Funny thing is, I wrote them a nasty email for it and they couldn't write back fast enough, totally defensive but also informing me they had gotten their defense fund contribution back - if I recall, they had taken a lot of flack over that, and that lead to their pulling back the money. btw, Nissan also contributed to that fund; chances of my ever buying a Nissan again = zero (I have owned three in the past so it's not like I would have never been a customer again).

I vote with my wallet on every single issue I become aware of. In our own small way, each of us can send a signal by spending our money elsewhere. And be sure to tell your friends!
Reply to this comment
by jumkey July 17, 2009 2:25 PM EDT
Money makes the conservative world go round.

Anybody who votes conservative is voting against themselves.
Reply to this comment
by fred-mertz July 17, 2009 3:50 PM EDT
"You are being misled by biased fawning news coverage." - ConstantineXI

Let's see... ACU charges $2 million for their "endorsement" and support. They don't care which side pays, so it's not like they have any actual political principles to uphold. The news reports these facts. And you call it "biased fawning news coverage"?

I was wrong when I said that repukes should read this story and they might understand how they have been misled. Repukes CAN NOT LEARN. They can only spew hatred and lies. efF Off, ConstantineXI.

Oh, and I just "love" (NOT!) the way you strew together a bunch of unrelated half-truths and lies so you can pretend Obama is "corrupt".

1. There is no evidence that Obama did anything illegal or improper relating to the "deal" he had with Rezko. You want to know what a corrupt deal is? Cheney gave Saddam Hussein money for WMDs, then he didn't think he got his money's worth, so the first chance he got, invaded Saddam's country, claiming Saddam's use of the weapons Cheney provided as the reason, and he killed millions of innocent people and Saddam! That's real corruption! Evil ganglords kill their underlings when they fail to live up to their evil masters' expectations.

2. I don't know if that church is "anti-semitic" or not, so I can't really comment on that particular item, other than to point out that Jesus was a Semite, and Obama is a Christian. SO, I doubt that Obama is a really an anti-semite.

3. Although Barack Obama served as an adviser to Blagojevich's 2002 gubernatorial campaign, by all accounts, Blagojevich and Obama have been estranged for years. Blagojevich did not endorse Obama in the 2004 US Senate race, and Obama did not invite Blagojevich to speak at the 2008 Democratic National Convention.

4. ACORN is NOT a "vote fraud organization". If you paid ANY attention, you'd know that ACORN was defrauded by people it hired. ACORN was required BY LAW to turn in the voter registration cards that they suspected were bogus, and ACORN turned the people they suspected of fraud in to the authorities!

Focus on the real outrage, ConstantineXI, which is morons like YOU who keep spewing the same old lies, over and over and over again. Nobody with an IQ over about 80 is buying your lies.
by antoniof123 July 17, 2009 2:05 PM EDT
So anyone still believe in the right wing reactionry nuts. They have had it the more we see slithering out from the carpet the more we realize that the Republicans would screw their mothers for money and a vote.
Reply to this comment
by cydygitt1 July 17, 2009 4:46 PM EDT
antoniof123 says:
"...the more we see slithering out from the carpet the more we realize that the Republicans would screw their mothers for money and a vote."

------------------

Ain't that the truth....what a bunch of CONServitard losers!
by ToolMangler1 July 17, 2009 5:20 PM EDT
by ConstantineXI July 17, 2009 2:44 PM EDT
And Obama receives the second largest campaign donations from Fannie Mae, gets a sweetheart deal from corrupt felon Tony Rezko, spends 20 years in an anti Semitic church, endorses corrupt pay to play Blagoyevich, and promotes the vote fraud organization ACORN and you don't apply the same standards. Focus on the real outrage, which is Obama.


The more you write, the more you remind me of 'Rowdy' or one of her nom de plumes. The mind set is the same (stupid). Inbreeding does that,
by fred-mertz July 17, 2009 1:58 PM EDT
If ONLY the repukes would read this! Maybe a FEW of them would realize that "conservative" is a meaningless word. They stand for NOTHING except greed. Every lie they tell is aimed at getting more money for themselves, and they tell all their stupid followers whatever it takes to get their support and obedience.
Reply to this comment
by Mac July 17, 2009 4:36 PM EDT
We do read these things. Do you read the ones about how the Libs cheat on Cap and Trade so the New York Times can help GE sell its carbon cleaning hardware?
by kerry4ever July 17, 2009 1:48 PM EDT
You left something out.

Among the services ACU had offered to provide for the $2 million price tag:

- Hypocrisy, cant, moral self righeousness, corruption and slime.
Reply to this comment
See all 15 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook