[Mpls] Campaign law questions
Terrell Brown
terrell at terrellbrown.org
Mon Mar 21 22:23:48 CST 2005
Take a look at the voter registration card, it's at:
http://www.sos.state.mn.us/election/MNVRCard.pdf One piece of information
it asks for is "phone number, " no idea why it's collected and it is
optional. Voter registration lists are available to anyone campaigning for
public office. Most candidates do buy the list from the Secretary of
State's office.
Phone numbers are easy to get.
Terrell Brown
Loring Park
>
>>Third, I have an unlisted phone number. I simply never give it out.
>>I am a DFL delegate but never gave my phone number to the DFL. Now I
>>did call the Mayor's Office to ask about Rybak's mailing that he did
>>back in January. That is the only place I can think his campaign
>>could have gotten my phone number. Is it legal for the Mayor to
>>"harvest" phone numbers from people who call him for legitimate city
>>purposes and use them for campaign purposes?
>>. . .
>>Corinne Becker
> Phone numbers are easily available online. Published numbers are very
> easy, unlisted are a bit harder to find, and often are not free. But
> still available.
>
> Searching on your name, the second site I visited told me there was an
> unpublished one for Corrine Becker at <your address>, which was available
> if I would pay for it. So it's not hard to find.
>
> Political campaigns, like commercial businesses, often hire someone to
> clean their address list, including verifying/updating phone numbers.
> It's a pretty standard process; I'd expect the Rybak campaign did this.
>
> Harvesting them one-by-one from calls to City Hall would take way too much
> manual effort to be cost effective. And saving the numbers of people who
> called to complain about the Mayor's action, as you did, would be
> especially conter-effective.
>
> So it's quite likely that the Rybak campaign just had a mailing firm do a
> standard cleanup & update on their list, and got your phone number that
> way.
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