E-Advocacy Strategies Not to Use
Submitted Fri Feb 12 2010 11:05:00 GMT-0500 (EST) by Jason Z.So you know: think twice before targeting your email lobbying campaign at the federal judge who's hearing your case.
Facing a new ruling from U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman, after a federal appeals court instructed him to reconsider an earlier $37.6 million contempt sanction, infomercial pitchman Kevin Trudeau apparently thought the judge might take note of praise from his fans for his books.
And Gettleman clearly did. Finding his court e-mail and BlackBerry flooded with thousands of messages sent in response to a blog post yesterday by the syndicated radio talk show host, the judge addressed what he described as e-mail harassment by threatening to have marshals come and get Trudeau if he didn't appear at an emergency hearing today, reports the Associated Press.
Then, when Trudeau did appear, the judge held him in criminal contempt and required him to surrender his passport and post $50,000 bond, the news agency recounts.
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Mission Over Membership in Online Advocacy
Submitted Thu Apr 24 2008 13:46:01 GMT-0400 (EDT)Read more (1 comment)
CCR Closes the E-Advocacy Loop With Holiday Video
Submitted Mon Dec 24 2007 10:56:34 GMT-0500 (EST)E-xemplar: Earth Day Network Ramps for April 22
Submitted Thu Apr 19 2007 19:08:51 GMT-0400 (EDT)NTEN Seeking Online Success Stories for ABC News Piece
Submitted Tue Mar 13 2007 10:37:09 GMT-0400 (EDT)I am seeking some very good stories from YOU for a piece on ABC News/vcast that will feature "technology for good' or how nonprofits are using tech to make the world a better place. Here is what I am looking for: Nonprofits are getting more and more savvy in using tech - and deploying techies who are doing good in the world. In April, more than 1,000 of these "Techies for Good" are coming to Washington DC.Read more (18 comments)
Fee For Constituent Service
Submitted Mon Nov 20 2006 14:39:05 GMT-0500 (EST)Read more (6 comments)
Congressional Email and the Myth of the Platonic Grove
Submitted Thu Oct 26 2006 18:00:00 GMT-0400 (EDT)With Capitol Hill a ghost town as members scramble to retain their peerages, the lull in legislative activity offers welcome pause to step back from the e-mail deliverability fracas of recent weeks.
A great many of the unmet expectations and bad feelings that have become bundled up in online write-your-rep actions ultimately trace to the unspoken assumptions various parties have about the communicative framework in which the action takes place.
That point was underscored in the live chat with Washington Post reporter Jeffrey Birnbaum the day his column ran Capitol Advantage's deliverability study. In response to a question about how to differentiate grassroots campaigns from astroturf, Birnbaum opined, "I'm afraid if an interest group incites a flood of e-mails, that's Astroturf lobbying by definition."
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