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Huck PAC -- which Huckabee promoted on Fox News -- now soliciting donations for campaigns against Democrats

November 10, 2009 6:48 am ET — 14 Comments

On two Fox News shows in October, Fox News host Mike Huckabee directed viewers to "go to balancecutsave.com," urging them to sign a petition telling Congress to "balance the budget," "cut their spending," and "save American families"; however, balancecutsave.com redirects visitors to Huckabee's political action committee, which financially supports Republican candidates and also pays Huckabee's daughter's salary. Subsequently, Huck PAC apparently emailed petition signers -- who were required to provide an email address in order to sign the "balancecutsave" petition -- "newsletters" urging political action on behalf of Republican-backed candidates and soliciting donations for campaigns against Democrats who voted for health care reform.

UPDATE II: Balancecutsave.com petition asked for donations to campaigns against Democrats

Huck PAC sending petition signers emails asking them to help remove Democratic health care proponents from office. A Media Matters for America employee who signed Huckabee's petition at balancecutsave.com received an email November 9 from Huck PAC asking people to donate to campaigns against Democrats who voted for health care reform. The email said: "I urge you to make a donation of $25 or more towards our efforts to vote these Democrats out of office."

huckpacletter1

huckpacletter2

UPDATE: Balancecutsave.com petition signers asked to make calls for GOP-backed candidates

Huck PAC sent petition signers emails asking them to phone bank for Republicans. The employee also received an email November 1 from Huck PAC asking people to participate in a phone bank for Republican gubernatorial candidate Bob McDonnell and congressional candidates David Harmer and Doug Hoffman. The email said that "[w]e need to help get each of these fine men elected" and asks recipients to "take a moment now to make phone calls to voters":

huckpacletter

Huckabee previously urged Fox News viewers to visit balancecutsave.com

Huckabee told viewers, "You can go to balancecutsave.com -- that's balancecutsave.com." On the October 4 edition of his Fox News show, Huckabee asked his viewers to sign a petition at balancecutsave.com so they could "tell Congress that we want them to balance the budget, we want them to cut their spending, and we want them to save American families."

Huckabee pushed petition on On the Record. Huckabee also appeared on the October 1 edition of Fox News' On the Record to promote the petition. He said he was "trying to get 100,000 names" and told viewers they could "[g]o to balancecutsave.com ... or they can go to the MikeHuckabee.com website and follow the links." After Huckabee told host Greta Van Susteren that he was also promoting the website through Twitter, Van Susteren said, "[P]lease, you've got to Twitter for Governor Huckabee because I want to raise his numbers tonight, so see if we can't get more people."

Balancecutsave.com redirects visitors to Huck PAC, which supports Republican candidates and pays Sarah Huckabee's salary

Balancecutsave.com directs users to petitions on HuckPAC.com. Balancecutsave.com is not a website on its own; users are immediately redirected to a petition page on Huckabee's political action committee website, HuckPAC.com. Once visitors have signed the petition, they are then directed to a page asking for donations. In addition to a YouTube video featuring Huckabee soliciting donations, the website asks for "any contribution of $15 or more."

huckpac

Huck PAC is "committed" to electing Republicans and will "promote their campaigns and financially support their efforts." According to its "mission" statement, "Huck PAC is committed to helping Republicans regain control of the House and Senate, regain a majority of governorships and supporting conservative principles around the country" and will "support Republican candidates who are passionate advocates for tax reform, a strong national defense, real border security, life, the family, less government, and individual liberty." The site also says the PAC will "identify candidates who hold firm to these principles, promote their campaigns and financially support their efforts."

Huck PAC Federal Election Commission (FEC) disclosure form lists Sarah Huckabee as an employee. A July 2009 FEC document for Huck PAC lists Sarah Huckabee -- Mike Huckabee's daughter -- as the recipient of $4,500 per month in funds; Sarah Huckabee is reportedly the executive director of Huck PAC.

Other Fox News figures have previously helped Republican PACs raise money

Morris asked Fox viewers to "give funds to GOPTrust.com" without noting his apparent financial ties to the organization. Between October 27, 2008, and November 17, 2008, Fox News contributor Dick Morris mentioned GOPTrust.com during at least 13 Fox News appearances and asked viewers to "give funds to GOPTrust.com," the website of the National Republican Trust PAC, without disclosing that the organization has paid $24,000 to a company apparently connected to Morris. Through publicly available records with the FEC, Media Matters found that GOPTrust.com paid Triangulation Strategies at least $24,000 from the beginning of October 2008 to November 24, 2008, mostly for "Email Communication." The "Mailing Address" for Triangulation Strategies is listed in one of the National Republican Trust PAC's FEC filings as "dickmorris.com."

Fox News "hops" aboard Tea Party Express to help PAC with fundraising. On August 28, Fox News devoted live coverage and publicity to the kickoff of the Tea Party Express, a bus tour organized by the Republican PAC Our Country Deserves Better (OCDB), whose mission is to oppose President Obama and the Democrats. Fox News' kickoff coverage followed numerous promotions of the tour on Fox News, Fox Business, the Fox Nation, and FoxNews.com. The OCDB PAC used Fox News' coverage of its Tea Party Express to fundraise in a July 29 email.

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    • Author by Tbone Slickens (November 10, 2009 8:40 am ET)
        6
      Just consider it a "moveon.org" in reverse!
      Report Abuse
      • Author by ScienceBuff (November 10, 2009 9:24 am ET)
        4  
        I don't suppose you're able to support that strange analogy, are you?
        Report Abuse
        • Author by ScienceBuff (November 10, 2009 11:45 am ET)
          4  
          Two and a half hours later, still no support. Are you really so shallow that you thought it was enough to throw out moveon.org as a buzzword when it had no relevance to the topic?

          That last question was rhetorical.
          Report Abuse
        • Author by Easy to refute wingnuts (November 10, 2009 1:18 pm ET)
             
          I don't suppose you're able to support that strange analogy, are you?
          <crickets>
          Report Abuse
      • Author by wzwriter (November 10, 2009 2:17 pm ET)
        2  
        What cable channel is providing free advertising to MoveOn.org 24/7??

        Answer: None.

        Your analogy is like feathers on a snake.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by baddestbob (November 10, 2009 9:59 am ET)
      1  
      can one imagine the outrage if an msnbc personality used his/her show to solicit money for the democratic party or for a particular candidate? why doesn't the network just admit the obvious...they are the official propaganda machine for the republican party?
      Report Abuse
    • Author by dexteritas0071418 (November 10, 2009 10:12 am ET)
        5
      WITH? Because he promoted it formerly on Fox? Because I don't see how this new development has anything to do with the media.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by eweston8542983 (November 10, 2009 10:35 am ET)
        4  
        Formerly, meaning he won't be going on faux to do it again?
        This crop of contributors came largely through his appearence on faux. Contributing evidence that faux has many piorities it places above informing its audience of real news.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by DellDolly (November 10, 2009 1:42 pm ET)
        2  
        Someone who is looking for donations for his political action committee has his own show on a supposedly fair and balanced news organization.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by Squevis McGillicutty (November 10, 2009 10:48 am ET)
         
      I would hazard to say that moveon.org gets mentioned more on Faux News more than it does on MSNBC. Of course it is mentioned in a completely negative connotation so as to preclude any sort of donation. Basically, Faux News is openly campaigning against the democratic party. It is one thing to deliver news that harms the democratic party, it is another to provide very real and very tangible political support to the republican and "tea" parties.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Easy to refute wingnuts (November 10, 2009 1:19 pm ET)
         
      They left the letters "upc" off the beginning of "HuckPAC..."
      Report Abuse
    • Author by quantpro (November 10, 2009 1:38 pm ET)
        3
      Duh! He is after all a Republican. Do you want him to fund raise for the Democrats? What a bunch of cry babies.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by wzwriter (November 10, 2009 2:19 pm ET)
        3  
        No. We expect a "news channel" to provide news - not free advertising and propaganda for one particular political party, which is what Faux News is doing.
        Report Abuse

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