Lincoln Strategy Group

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Lincoln Strategy Group is the new name of the political consulting and PR firm previously known as Sproul and Associates.

In June 2008, "a joint committee of the McCain-Palin campaign, the RNC and the the California Republican Party, made a $175,000 payment to the group Lincoln Strategy ... for purposes of 'registering voters.'" The contract was controversial, as the firm (under its previous name, Sproul and Associates) "has been investigated on multiple occasions for suppressing Democratic voter turnout, throwing away registration forms and even spearheading efforts to get Ralph Nader on ballots to hinder the Democratic ticket." [1]

Nathan Sproul, who was formerly the executive director of the Arizona State Republican Party, founded Sproul and Associates in 2003 and is based in Tempe, Arizona. Sproul and Associates had worked in 21 different states for various city, state, congressional, and national campaigns. He currently serves as the co-founder and Managing Director of Lincoln Strategy Group. Sproul himself specializes in campaign/public affairs management, get-out-the vote efforts, ballot initiative management, media and public relations, and business and political leadership. [2]

Controversy over 2004 presidential work

Sproul & Associates was a private company who hired Voters Outreach of America to work on a national canvassing project (sometimes referred to as "America Votes," but unrelated to the liberal leaning 527 group with that name). The group was accused of fraud aimed at preventing Democrats from voting in the 2004 U.S. elections. Voters Outreach of America is run by Aaron James in Nevada. [3]

One Nevada worker hired by Voters Outreach of America, Eric Russell, "said he was instructed to register only Republicans, and that he saw a supervisor tear up completed registration forms from Democrats." [4] In a refutation of the claims alleged by Russell, Sproul said "as best I can tell, the incident he [Russell] alleges didn't happen. It caused great discomfort for me, my family and my business. [5]

West Virginia worker Lisa Bragg told Salon.com a similar story: "Workers were asked to congregate outside local convenience stores and pretend to be nonpartisan political pollsters interested in the nuances of local opinion. ... But if the respondents to this pretend poll said that they were Bush supporters, canvassers were told to offer to help them register to vote. If they said they were Kerry supporters, the canvassers would politely walk away." In Pennsylvania, workers were told to ask if undecided voters considered themselves pro-life or pro-choice. "If the voters were pro-life, they were to be registered. [But, the employee script read:] 'If they are pro-choice, say thank you and walk away.'" [6]

2004 Arizona Republican Party Executive Director Bill Christiansen stated "Nathan Sproul is a victim of shamelss statements by the Democrats who will say anything to win". [7]

Nathan Sproul was the former Executive Director of the Arizona Republican Party. [8]Sproul and Associates was paid more than $8,000,000 [[3]] by the Republican National Committee in 2004. [6]

Sproul and Associates had managed an earlier campaign to repeal Arizona's popular Clean Elections system, an effort in which it got 280,000 signatures. "No Taxpayer Money for Politicians," the effort to repeal Clean Elections, did not go unnoticed by the opposing campaign: "Even though their measure repealed Clean Elections, canvassers would say either that the measure didn't alter Clean Elections in any way, or that it actually helped Clean Elections. Bob Grossfeld, the Democratic political consultant, secretly videotaped one canvasser peddling this lie." [6]

Personnel

From news accounts: [9]

Contact

Lincoln Strategy Group
740 South Mill Avenue, Suite 200
Tempe, AZ
Phone:(480) 303-7175
Website: http://www.Lincoln-Strategy.com
Email: info AT lincoln-strategy.com

Articles and resources

Related SourceWatch articles

References

  1. Sam Stein, "McCain Employing GOP Operative Accused Of Voter Registration Fraud," Huffington Post, October 20, 2008.
  2. Lincoln Strategy Group, "[1]", accessed September 2017.
  3. [2]
  4. Ken Ritter, "Nevada judge declines to reopen voter registration in Vegas area," Associated Press, October 15, 2004.
  5. Beth DeFalco, "GOP Operative Under Fire Over Tactics," Associated Press, October 29, 2004.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Farhad Manjoo, "Sproul Play," Salon.com, October 21, 2004.
  7. Beth DeFalco, "GOP operative under fire over voter-registration tactics", San Franciso Chronicle, October 28, 2004. (This is an Associated Press story).
  8. Ken Ritter, "Nevada judge declines to reopen voter registration in Vegas area," Associated Press, October 15, 2004.
  9. "Lobbying firm adding names fast," The Arizona Republic (Phoenix), December 9, 2007.

External resources

External articles