Tag Archives: front groups

Watching Freedom’s Watch: A Classic Front Group

What is a Front Group?

As a team that has spent a tremendous amount of time, especially over the last four years investigating and exposing these groups, here is a little history about where front froups came from.

The modern political front group actually got its start about 50 years ago in the tobacco industry. As the Surgeon General targeted cigarettes and scientific studies were being publicized about the dangers of cigarettes, the tobacco industry, quite simply, created their own front groups in order to counter the real groups.

They said, “Doubt is our product,” and they used well-funded front groups to fool the public into believing there were “two sides” to the story that tobacco use cased cancer and other diseases.

What are the characteristics of those groups that help define a front group today?

Well, for one, the proponents are paid mercenaries, not concerned citizens.

Just as John O’Neill received $50,000 in August 2004 from the Swift Boat Veterans For Truth and Admiral Roy Hoffman’s foundation received $100,000 in early 2005, the people working for Freedom’s Watch are not tireless grassroots advocates, they are paid professionals.

The second characteristic of these groups is that they are launched fully-formed and well-funded, often directly from Washington, D.C. The funding comes from few sources, and the front group is designed to push yet mask the agenda of these few funders. The day that Freedom’s Watch launched out of DC, it had $15 million in the bank and completed TV commercials.

Contrast this with say, MoveOn.org, which was launched from an online petition by Wes Boyd and Joan Blades in California and grew into an organization as thousands upon thousands of concerned regular citizens joined. Or VoteVets, launched by Jon Soltz living in his office in New York.

Movements come from outside in, ground up. Front groups are launched fully formed, top down.

One of the clearest ways to see this is to look at the traffic that two sites receive.

If you head on over to www.alexa.com and compare MoveOn with Freedom’s Watch, you’ll see a clear fact – Freedom’s Watch doesn’t get any traffic – there is no support from the ground up, there is only the front, from the top down.

Finally, while Joan and Wes have always been and always will be involved with MoveOn, just as VoteVets is always going to be Jon Soltz’s group, the heads of front groups like Freedom’s Watch will change.

It appears that Bradley Blakeman is now the President, former George Bush spokesperson. He wasn’t the head of it when it launched. And six months from now, it will be someone else.

The donors and the missions of front groups remain, the employees change, a lot.

To find out more about Freedom’s Watch, visit www.freedomswatch.newsladder.net.

Join the Watching Freedom’s Watch Facebook Group

This is our previous post in this series, Watching Freedom’s Watch: The Donors.

California’s Capital Resource Institute — Isn’t This Illegal?

(The best part? John Doolittle (R-CA-11) is on the board of this “Institute” – promoted by SFBrianCL)

Cross-posted from Seeing the Forest

I became aware of California’s Capital Resource Institute because they mailed out a “Christians vote your conscience” e-mail today that was remarkably similar to those sent by Dobson’s Focus on the Family and others, encouraging people to vote for Republicans without technically using the word “Republican.”

When more Christians apply their biblical values at the ballot box, there will be a significant change in our government – more godly leaders will be elected to office and our laws will once again uphold the sanctity of human life, traditional marriage, and religious freedom.

… Just two years ago “Values Voters” made a huge difference in the 2004 election.  Together we can make a huge difference in this one too. 

Their website states, “Capitol Resource Institute is California’s leading pro-family grassroots advocacy group.”  They are a 501 (c)3 :  from their donations page:

Capitol Resource Institute, 1414 K Street, Suite 200, Sacramento, CA 95814. Your donations to CRI are tax-deductible under IRS code section 501(c)3.

The advisory board consists of Republican elected officials and a talk show host.  Their Voter Information asks “Is Your State Legislator Family-Friendly?” and links to a Republican Party site: [note – PDF] http://www.californiarepublicanassembly.com/pdfs/CRALegislativeScorecard2005.pdf.  Republicans score high, Dems score low.  Duh.

501 (c)3 tax-exempt organizations are prohibited from conducting partisan operations, as Capital Resource Institute appears to be doing.  This organization appears to be little more than a front group for the Republican Party, set up in a way to give tax breaks to party supporters.  The Christian Coalition’s tax-exempt status was revoked for exactly this reason.

And look who shares the same offices:  Pacific Research Institute.  (More info here.)  From the PRI website:

Sacramento Office:
1414 K Street, Suite 200