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Opinion: Political texts are pinging off the rails

This Aug. 1, 2017, file photo, shows a call log displayed via an AT&T app on a cellphone in Orlando, Fla.
John Raoux/AP
/
AP
This Aug. 1, 2017, file photo, shows a call log displayed via an AT&T app on a cellphone in Orlando, Fla.

Ping! It's Nancy Pelosi. Ping! Now it's JD Vance. Ping! Now it's someone running for Congress somewhere who says my contribution in the next five minutes could be the last chance for civilization. Let me think. Ping!

I've been getting a lot of text messages from politicians asking for money. Perhaps you have, too.

Alex Quilici of the call-blocking service YouMail told us there may be a billion — yes, billion with a "B" — political text messages sent out each week leading up to the election. Many of them claim to be a personal appeal from a well-known politician.

"Text messages are quite cheap," explains Professor Michael Kang, who studies campaign finance at Northwestern University Law School. "Even a very low yield from text messaging can be cost effective."

You might think, "Wait! I never gave Ted Cruz, Elise Stefanik, or Cory Booker my number! Why are they texting me?"

But you probably have given your mobile number to many different companies, for many different reasons. Marketers buy those numbers by the millions. Did you think when they asked you to check an "I agree" box to order that pair of shoes, those cookies they mentioned were Chips Ahoy?

I wondered how it is that I get text messages from politicians, left, right, and center, who wouldn't seem to inhabit the same algorithm. Kang says that though you might consider yourself, say, a political conservative, you could drive a car, or prefer a brand of beer or toothpaste statistically favored by progressives. Or vice versa.   

"There's no penalty from politicians being over-inclusive," says the professor, "other than annoying some recipients who aren't sympathetic to them anyway."    

And he says the more money campaigns raise, the more they'll keep fundraising.

"Election campaigns are arms races," explains Professor Kang, "They'll just find more ways to spend the money."

And he adds there's not much to curb the tide of political text messages. They're free speech, protected by the First Amendment.

But I wonder, why not let people reply directly to the politicians who send messages to us?

We could bring them some of our most urgent cash requests. "Senator, a gallon of milk is up to $3. The cost of peanut butter, lettuce, and apples is up, too. Give me your credit card number now. I got a vote here, you know!"

 

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Scott Simon is one of America's most admired writers and broadcasters. He is the host of Weekend Edition Saturday and is one of the hosts of NPR's morning news podcast Up First. He has reported from all fifty states, five continents, and ten wars, from El Salvador to Sarajevo to Afghanistan and Iraq. His books have chronicled character and characters, in war and peace, sports and art, tragedy and comedy.

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