‘Zuckbucks’ Group Acts As A Shadow Legislature In Rural America(Here we go again)
BY: LOGAN WASHBURN SEPTEMBER 06, 20241/3
Applications for the new round of CTCL grants opened in August. The organization has approved election funding in these jurisdictions.
The Center for Tech and Civic Life, which funneled millions in “Zuckbucks” to local election agencies in 2020 through grants favoring Democrat areas, recently announced another round of grants to “rural and nonmetro” election offices ahead of November. The leftist group has awarded grants to at least 11 jurisdictions so far, cultivating relationships with election officials while effectively taking on the legislature’s job of appropriating funds for elections.
Applications for the new round of CTCL grants opened Aug. 2, and the organization has so far approved election funding in at least the following jurisdictions:Colorado (San Juan County); Massachusetts (Orange); Maine (Belgrade, Caribou, Farmington, and West Paris); Minnesota (Nobles County); Nevada (White Pine County); New Hampshire (Meredith and Plymouth); and Vermont (Washington).
A Shadow Legislature
Many of these election officials expressed the need for funding and infrastructure, and CTCL has effectively taken on the role of a shadow legislature, granting money to fill the perceived needs of election officials.
Doing so allows the group, which was responsible for election meddling to benefit Democrats in 2020, to curry favor with those officials.
“CTCL is run by sophisticated Democratic operatives. If sophisticated Republican operatives were digging out internal information from government election offices and befriending them with cash, the New York Times and others on the left would rightly be outraged,” said Scott Walter, president of Capital Research Center, in a statement to The Federalist. “CTCL deserves the same response.”
The group’s money is supposedly going toward meeting local election needs, taking on the legislative role of providing funding for things like tabulators, ballot storage, polling station work, security upgrades, and more. But in the last presidential election, CTCL grants came with strings attached.
Charles Alex Lanis, chief deputy clerk for San Juan County, Colorado, told The Federalist his office accepted a $5,000 grant from CTCL in hopes of keeping up with the state’s larger counties. Lanis said his office applied for the grant in early August due to “limited resources” and expensive elections in rural jurisdictions.
“While CTCL does offer resources such as webinars and best practices, our engagement has been centered around the funding to address our specific election needs,” Lanis said.
He said no other nonprofits had yet contacted the office since it received the grant, but his office accepted an Institute for Responsive Government grant on Aug. 29 for $6,000. As The Federalist previously reported, CTCL promoted the grant from IRG, which has close ties to both CTCL and leftist groups.“These funds aren’t as specific and have few, if any, strings attached,” Lanis said.
Nancy Blackmer, town clerk for Orange, Massachusetts, told The Federalist she pursued the grant due to budget cuts. She said CTCL awarded the grant on Aug. 6 – to the tune of $20,000, according to the Greenfield Recorder.
She said CTCL has not yet offered any “resources or guidance” like training, access to conferences or webinars, aid in ballot curing, or guidance on absentee or drop-box policies, and no other nonprofit had yet contacted her office since it received the grant.
Mary Vogel, town clerk of Belgrade, Maine, told The Federalist she applied for the grant because she wanted to “acquire some equipment” and “additional manpower” to keep the budget down. She said she is “thankful” the grant money allows her to purchase equipment she would otherwise “have to budget for over several years time.” CTCL awarded the $5,000 grant on Aug. 14, and Vogel’s office received a check Aug. 26, Vogel said.
She said while CTCL training, access to conferences or webinars, aid in ballot curing, or guidance on absentee or drop box policies “may have been
available,” she has not been able to participate due to other responsibilities. She said no other nonprofits had yet contacted her office since receiving the grant.
https://thefederalist.com/2024/09/06/zuckbucks-group-acts-as-a-shadow-legislature-in-rural-america/