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Republicans attempt to solicit money for Trump 2020 campaign with forms mimicking census, officials warn

Montana officials alert residents about misleading surveys for second time this year

Kim Bellware,Brittany Shammas
Tuesday 01 October 2019 06:57 EDT
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Officials in Montana are warning residents for a second time this year about surveys sent by the Republican National Committee that mimic the look of federal census forms with the goal of soliciting money for Donald Trump‘s re-election campaign.

The mailers are labelled “2019 congressional District Census” and inform recipients they have been “selected to represent voters” in Bozeman, Montana.

The accompanying literature makes repeated requests for donations, urging recipients to send at least $15 (£12) to “help pay for the costs of processing [the] Census Document” should they be unable to afford an amount in the requested range of $25 to $1,000 (£20 to £813).

The potentially misleading mailings come as the US Census Bureau is preparing for what is expected to be one of the most challenging federal counts in decades as the bureau grapples with factors like a switch to digital and the fallout from the Trump administration’s efforts to get a citizenship question into the survey.

After the documents landed in mailboxes across four Montana counties, state officials put out a warning about the “imitation Census survey”.

In a Friday news release, the Montana Department of Commerce reminded residents legitimate Census survey documents are postmarked from the US Department of Commerce, US Census Bureau, rather than political groups, and never ask for money.

“Montanans need accurate information about the Census to make sure we have a complete count of the folks who live here,” Lieutenant Governor Mike Cooney, a Democratic candidate for governor, said in the release, which was first reported by the Bozeman Daily Chronicle.

“A complete count means the state will get its fair share of federal funding. The official Census is easy to complete, secure, and does not cost money. An accurate and complete Census count for Montana is too important to take lightly.”

The Republican National Committee did not respond to request for comment.

Emilie Ritter Saunders, a spokesperson for the Montana Department of Commerce, said the forms first popped up this spring, prompting her office’s first response of the year.

Some residents reached out to ensure the department was aware of the impostor surveys, while others were confused as to what they were receiving.

“We want to immediately squash any confusion. Our job is to make sure Montanans have accurate info about the census,” Ms Ritter Saunders said.

The “imitation surveys” are cause for concern among state officials tasked with ensuring a complete count in the state: Montana has roughly $2bn (£1.6bn) in federal dollars on the line for everything from highway construction to food programmes, Ms Ritter Saunders said.

“That funding is critical for a state like Montana that has a relatively small population,” she said.

“Estimates show that Montana is also on the cusp of receiving another congressional representative.”

Seats in the US House of Representatives are reapportioned every 10 years based on a state’s growing or declining population.

Ms Ritter Saunders said the RNC has sent out lookalike Census forms in at least one prior census.

In 2010, people – including the Democratic governor of Montana and a Democratic representative in Georgia – reported getting such a survey, according to ProPublica.

Phony Census mailers are enough of a concern that Congress in 2010 passed the Prevent Deceptive Census Lookalike Mailings Act.

The Montana mailers include a letter signed by RNC chair Ronna McDaniel, which says Mr Trump has requested a “Census of every congressional district be completed immediately to help ensure re-election”.

It says the information is needed to create voter profiles and “target audiences with the truth concerning President Trump’s agenda”.

“If the Democrats win this battle,” the letter says, “it will prove disastrous for America’s future.”

The survey itself includes questions such as:

  • “How confident are you that America’s economy will continue to improve in the next 12 months?”
  • “Do you support President Trump in his determination to appoint judges who will adhere to strict constitutional principles and not use the court to advance their personal ideologies?”
  • “The Democrats’ fixation on ‘climate change’ has led to costly regulations that are negatively affecting our nation’s economy across-the-board. Do you think climate change is a major threat to our nation?”

Terri Ann Lowenthal, a census expert who served as former staff director of the House census oversight subcommittee in the 1980s, condemned the mailers.

“No organisation, whether it’s political or a private business, should be using the word ‘census’ in any of its mailings from now until the 2020 census is complete,” Ms Lowenthal told The Washington Post.

“They are trying to attract attention and are doing so at the expense of public confidence in a constitutionally required civic activity.”

Mailings that mimic the real census have been a problem since at least the 1990s. Congress has passed at least two laws since then – most recently the Prevent Deceptive Census Lookalike Mailings Act in 2010 – aimed at curbing mail that impersonates a federal agency.

Ms Lowenthal said it is difficult to judge whether the mailers from Montana run afoul of any laws without first seeing the envelope they were sent in to determine if the material gives the impression it is an official government mailing.

As ProPublica reported, the misleading census forms from 2010 did not violate any laws.

“In this case, using the word Census, even with a capital “C” does not equate to impersonation of the US Census Bureau,” it reported at the time.

The Washington Post

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