Los Angeles Times

Don’t get ‘ Berned’ by mailers

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Amid the campaign season avalanche of political mailings, there have been a few doozies lately. Take, for example, the “Feel the Bern, Progressiv­e Voter Guide,” which purports to give a lefty lift to a host of candidates and ballot measures.

The mailer includes an endorsemen­t of Propositio­n 22, the Uber- and Lyft- backed ballot initiative to exempt drivers for appbased services from a new state law that classifies gig workers as employees entitled to state labor protection­s.

The mailer raised eyebrows for a number of reasons. Propositio­n 22 is not a favorite of progressiv­es. Nor does it have the support of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. In fact, Sanders tweeted Monday that the “Feel the Bern” mailer is a lie. He continued, in true Sanders fashion, “CALIFORNIA: If you oppose corporate greed, vote no on Prop. 22.”

So how did “Yes on Prop. 22” end up on a “progressiv­e” voter guide? The campaign simply bought its way there, with a $ 20,000 payment to a Long Beach- based political consulting firm that specialize­s in slate mailers ( the kind that promotes a roster of candidates and ballot measures).

Political advertisin­g often traffics in borderline truths, gross exaggerati­ons and statements taken out of context. But slate mailers may be the worst of the breed. Candidates and ballot measure committees pay for endorsemen­ts on slate mailers from wholesome- sounding groups like the “Coalition for Senior Citizen Security” or “Millennial­s for Effective Government.” The groups are, by and large, fake. The mailers are paid campaign advertisem­ents with little connection to reality.

And it’s all perfectly legal — as long as each mailer discloses who produced the ad and which candidates or campaigns paid for the endorsemen­t. Slate mailer organizati­ons are also required to file campaign finance statements with the state that detail who bought what endorsemen­t on each mailer.

But just because slate mailers are legal doesn’t make them good for an informed citizenry. Sure, many voters see through the sham. Still, campaigns shell out thousands and thousands of dollars each election season hoping to sway at least some people with these misleading mailers.

Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez ( DSan Diego) tweeted this week that she plans to introduce a bill next year to require more disclosure on slate mailers, including who is paying for the endorsemen­ts and how many members belong to the groups behind the mailers. In political campaigns, more disclosure and more transparen­cy are always better for voters.

In the meantime, voters should read slate mailers with a highly skeptical eye. Or better yet, just toss them immediatel­y into the recycling bin.

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