Posted on 02/04/2012 6:53:17 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
Very, very good e-mail lists and an internal debate over whether to use them. I'm getting really tired of the ads for Romney campaign trips coming from this list serve, writes one young Mormon.
LAS VEGAS, Nevada -- At Mitt Romneys first rally here earlier this week, there were plenty of hints that the enthusiastic crowd of 1,000 was stacked with Mormons. Kids walked around in BYU sweatshirts, moms chatted about LDS youth groups, and at least one supporter was overheard talking about making phone calls for the candidate as part of "family home evening" -- a weekly family night the church encourages its members to hold.
But while it's no secret that Romney's coreligionists have swelled the ranks at campaign stops from Des Moines to Reno, one question about the Mormon vote has gone largely unanswered this primary season: How, exactly, have they gotten so organized?
"We heard about it from some friends in our [LDS] ward," said one woman standing outside a rally held in a Las Vegas hotel supply warehouse. "We're so glad we could make it." Another Mormon standing nearby chimed in, "Everyone we know is voting for Mitt!"
The secret to the grassroots success lies, in part, in the unique national structure and scrupulous record-keeping of the Utah-headquartered Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. While the church itself is politically neutral, it contains the structural groundwork for one of the most organized and effective voting blocs in the countrysomething Romney is poised to capitalize on.
Heres how it works
In contrast with most other religions in the country, the Mormon Church is nationally organized in a strict, top-down fashion, like a corporation. Every congregation in the U.S. reports back to church headquarters in Salt Lake. Whenever an individual is baptized -- either as a child or as a convert -- local ministers take down the persons name, address, phone number, and e-mail address, and feed the information into a national database maintained by officials in Salt Lake (and only accessible to certain church leaders).
From there, the individuals are assigned to geographically-determined congregations -- or wards -- of about 200-300, which they attend on Sundays. Their contact information is filtered into a local ward list, which is distributed to all local congregants for planning purposes--from coordinating Sunday school, to working out the logistics for church barbeques.
For decades, these ward lists were printed out and distributed after Sunday services, but in recent years the system has migrated online to LDS.org, where Mormons create logins to access the contact information for every fellow believer in the area.
For active Mormons, wards often become the center of their social universe: its not uncommon for members to visit their local chapels three or four times a week for various activities and meetings. Additionally, Mormons participate in home and visiting teaching programs, which require them to visit certain ward members on a monthly basis. In this context, ward lists become invaluable tools for Mormons daily lifeinevitably finding their way into Google groups, listservs, and cell phones.
They also frequently become political tools.
Working the wards
The church expressly forbids using these directories for non-religious purposes, but that doesnt deter many politically active Mormons from working their ward lists to get out the vote. Reports abound of members blasting out congregational e-mails soliciting support for partisan causes and candidates. One Southern California ward received several e-mails urging congregants to vote for an LDS politician running for local office. And in nastier example of the practice, ward lists in Alpine, Utah were used to spread an anonymous smear campaign against a candidate on the eve of a local election.
Several Mormons told BuzzFeed that as the 2012 primaries heated up, they started to see their fellow congregants use ward lists to organize local efforts for Romney.
Here in Nevada, Ryan Erwin, a consultant for the Romney campaign, acknowledged that the candidate has benefitted from grassroots efforts by Latter-day Saints, and said the campaign is proud of their support. But he also thinks the Mormon factor has been overstated.
Mormons make up seven percent of the population here, Erwin said. If you read some of the reports in the media, youd think it was 90 percent its a little aggravating when youve worked for months to build up an organization and then they say, Well, he just won it because hes a Mormon.
That said, exit polls in 2008 showed that about 25 percent of Nevada caucus-goers self-identified as Mormon -- and Romney won that primary handily. This time around, polling indicates that hes headed for a similarly dominant victory, and if it happens, local Latter-day Saints will no doubt deserve a chunk of the credit.
Much like how Iowas Christian home-school vote advanced its own grassroots efforts for Mike Huckabee largely independently of his campaign, theres no evidence that Team Romney is officially coordinating with Mormon congregations. But anecdotal evidence suggests that a highly motivated base of Mormon supporters has effectively taken advantage of the LDS infrastructure to help Romney.
The Colonial First Ward listserv
One of the most illustrative examples is the Colonial First Ward listserv, which consists of more than 3,500 D.C.-area Mormons, many of them young and single.
E-mails obtained by BuzzFeed show the listserv being used frequently as a recruiting tool for Romney supporters -- gathering signatures to get the candidate on the Delaware ballot, requesting volunteers to aid the campaigns Illinois operation, and organizing a get-out-the-vote trip to South Carolina on the weekend of the primary.
The fruits of that last effort were obvious on the ground in Columbia, S.C., where dozens of young Mormon students from Virginia and D.C. were found rallying for Romney at various campaign stops.
But not everyone on the listserv has looked kindly upon efforts to transform the network into a booster club for Romney, and a number of members have e-mailed complaints.
Matt Larsen, a member of the listserv, wrote last October: I know Im probably going to make enemies here, but Im getting really tired of the ads for Romney campaign trips coming from this list serve. The disclaimer at the bottom of every list serve email states very clearly: Items that will not be posted/that will be removed include: promoting your business, promoting political ideologies, and inflammatory comments and rhetoric.
The protests appear to have been ignored though, with members continuing to send out e-mails as recently as last month that requested volunteer help for Romney.
The Colonial First Ward listserv seems to be a miraculous pro-Romney organizing tool, grumbled one D.C.-area Mormon, who is a Democrat. Whenever you get the contact information for 3,540 young Mormons in one place, I guess it has to be.
“I could not and many others coult not as well.”
Thank you for not dancing around the issue. Every American is free to vote as they wish, obviously. That you would openly sanction this action with a fringe group of your friends is something for which you all should be held to task.
I wish more Americans understood why your views are wrong, and would stand up and vigorously object to the development of “approved religions”. Our founding fathers had to grapple with this issue. Their conclusion was freedom - absolute freedom of religion.
You and your friends on the thread are suggesting candidates, and people should be judged primarily, and sometimes solely by their religion, and then get increasingly angry at me for pointing out how abhorrent to constitutional principles your views are, and how ridiculous it is, as a group to advocate for this.
Your views marginalize conservatism, and our Constitution.
I believe that your view is truly destructive to the republic - once we segregate into our own religious enclaves, we become little better than the savages in Iraq and Afghanistan.
I defend your right to express your views, but your views are abhorrent, anti-American, and unconstitutional, and not in any way Conservative.
Why thank you.
You still continue to shill for Romney by accusations against those of us who oppose the BHO clone as un-American.
What part of Romney is who he is BECAUSE of his mormonISM do you not understand?
There is nothing in Romney’s DNA that would allow him to be conservative. He is not conservative BECAUSE he is a mormon.
His mormonISM is his core.
All candidates have at their core their beliefs.
Your core is your belief structure, which apparently is that if some doesn’t lock step to your thoughts they are un-American taliban types.
You go ahead and be lock step with Romney and mormonISM, you have a right to do that.
I have a right as an American to call you out on it.
I shill for the Constitution.
Find another reason not to vote for Romney - there are plenty of them - but if you persist in turning this political race into a religious war, you are going to provide nothing but sympathy for Romney. People value religious freedom.
You still don’t get it. This is a Constitutional issue, not a Romney issue, or a Mormon issue.
Really?
What is is that you do not get? Romney is the liberal he is because of his mormonISM.
It is not possible to separate the two.
Just as it is not possible to separate your belief system of superiority from you.
There is not one place in the Constitution that says I am not permitted to use ANY criteria I want when choosing a candidate.
I choose freely not to support liberals - period.
I will not vote for either Romney or BHO because they are liberals - period.
I will not support Romney or BHO because they advocate killing of babies.
I will not support Romney or BHO because they advocate the homosexual agenda.
I will not support Romney or BHO because they support gun grabs.
I will not support Romney or BHO because they support government mandates.
I will not support Romney or BHO because of their core.
I will not support Romney because his core is mormonISM, which is why he believes what he does.
I will not support BHO because his core is islam which is why he believes what he does.
Apparently you do not.
Exactly. bttt
"....But some of the people who imagine theyre honest skeptics only pretend their questions are about politics, when theyre really about mocking religious belief........" ~ Wesley Pruden - editor emeritus of The Washington Times.
78posted on Monday, January 16, 2012 9:49:22 AM by Matchett-PI
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"The last time we elected a Good Christian was Jimmy Carter a former Southern Baptist.. Sorry religion does not matter to me. In fact Im going to use the idiot logic here.. I wont vote for a person who is a Southern Baptist..
61posted on Thursday, December 29, 2011 8:50:01 PM by KevinDavis
Man, I really agree with your statement.
“What is is that you do not get? Romney is the liberal he is because of his mormonISM.”
You are a lost puppy.
Mormons are no more politically monolithic than Protestants, or Catholics.
You’re just wrong.
“Apparently you do not.”
You’ve come undone.
I guess since I don’t share your hatred of Mormons you think that I’m Mormon and that somehow it follows that I don’t believe in religious freedom.
Nuts.
98% of mormons according to exit polls voted for Romney
Sweetie, nice try at changing the subject again.
I do not and have never hated mormons.
I loath mormonISM.
“98% of mormons according to exit polls voted for Romney”
Do you want me to take you to school on statistics, or do you just want to keep hating mormons?
“I do not and have never hated mormons.”
Ok, fine. Then take your efforts and redirect them towards liberals, and big government and we’ll get along fine - and neither of us will vote for Romney.
Otherwise, you should have noticed that it wasn't "my" statement, but that of Kevin Davis. It isn't as if I didn't give you a link to it. Here it is again for double measure(the way you seem to like your drinks):
"The last time we elected a Good Christian was Jimmy Carter a former Southern Baptist.. Sorry religion does not matter to me. In fact Im going to use the idiot logic here.. I wont vote for a person who is a Southern Baptist.."
61posted on Thursday, December 29, 2011 8:50:01 PM by KevinDavis
The lds-org denies that Jesus is the Creator, that everything was created THROUGH Him, BY Him and FOR Him.
They deny that Jesus created even the angels out of nothing.
Substitue moslem for mormon and tell me you wouldn’t be just a tad apprehensive about applying some kind of personal “religious test” to the candidate?
Mormons support their own in all aspects of life. Wherever Jimmer Fredette plays basketball you will find BYU or Jimmer shirts in the stands. Steve Young has a crowd whenever he speaks. The same is true of Mitt. If there is something wrong with voting for a member you had better have a talk with Evangelical Christians.
Mormons believe The Constitution was inspired by God. Mormons have a Cub Pack and a Boy Scout Troop in every ward where possible, and teach Scout principles.
I have been a member for 57 years and have never heard the Savior’s name used in vain by an active church member. I got so sick of hearing the profanity at work I started my own business to get away from it.
May God Bless you and yours.
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