New York Daily News

GOP’s fake census

Letter looks real, but it’s slimy cash grab: Dems

- BY SHANT SHAHRIGIAN

If it looks like a census form, feels like a census form and even blares the word census all over it — it’s not necessaril­y a census form.

The Republican National Committee is mailing fundraisin­g letters that closely resemble census forms from coast to coast.

“Enclosed is your official 2020 CONGRESSIO­NAL DISTRICT CENSUS … in your name as a representa­tive of Yorktown Heights,” reads a letter sent to a registered Republican in Westcheste­r County that was obtained by the Daily News. The missive even assigned the recipient a seven-digit “registered code” similar to codes used to access online forms for the real census.

“This is the largest congressio­nal district census our party has ever taken for a presidenti­al election,” the letter continues in two front-andback pages of text.

“This is a perversion of the normal functionin­g of government,” said Susan Lerner, executive director of the goodgovern­ment group Common Cause New York. “Its timing is particular­ly objectiona­ble because it will confuse people and discourage them from actually participat­ing in the official census.”

The mailing also includes a large form with 41 multiplech­oice questions that mimic the real 2020 census that will be distribute­d starting next month. At the bottom, there’s a large box to “certify” the survey and provide credit card details to make a contributi­on to the RNC.

While the questions are about political views — a nono on the real thing, which collects a range of demographi­c info — critics say the RNC mailings could trick people into thinking they’ve completed a census and wreak havoc on the process of counting Americans.

Similar RNC mailings have been spotted in Ohio, Montana, Washington and California, Lerner said.

Rep. Katie Porter (D-Calif.) grilled the Census Bureau’s director at a congressio­nal hearing on Thursday.

“This is not the first time that we have seen the RNC … try to confuse voters by sending them a mailer that imitates the census,” the congresswo­man said. “This mailing has already gone out, so the time to stop it has already happened.”

Census Bureau Director Steven Dillingham said he hadn’t seen the RNC’s mail-danger. ings but promised to look into the issue.

“I’ve heard generally about the problem,” he said. “We will study this problem.”

Similar tactics from the RNC in 2010 prompted Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.) to write the Prevent Deceptive Census Look Alike Mailings Act. The law bars nongovernm­ent groups from sending solicitati­ons with the word “census” on the envelope, outside cover or wrapper through U.S. mail.

Maloney fumed at the emergence of a phony census from the RNC just outside the city.

“Clearly, the RNC has found a way to skirt the law deliberate­ly, making their actions even more reprehensi­ble,” she said in a statement. “These mailings sow confusion at a time when the public needs clarity about the census – putting an accurate count in “I am now working to strengthen the language of the Prevent Deceptive Census Look Alike Mailings Act so that these dirty political tricks can’t be used in the future.”

The RNC declined to disclose how many fake census letters it has sent in New York and nationwide.

“This ‘story’ is nothing new and has already been covered several times,” an RNC official said.

The Democratic National Committee has never sent fund-raising mail disguised as the census, a spokesman said.

The mailings come as many states are spending millions of dollars to educate residents about the census, results of which determine political maps, federal spending and a host of vital civic functions. Gov. Cuomo allocated $60 million to census outreach, while the city is spending $40 million on the effort.

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