Anyone who's ever donated to a political campaign or group probably knows the score: You give money to a candidate or cause you support one time, and then you're deluged with messages begging for more. This experience has recently gotten an even bigger spotlight recently as political fundraising has ballooned over the past few months, looping in even more people to these calls for donations as we near Election Day.
Though these messages might seem endless, especially during the heated days of a presidential race, there's always a way to make them stop -- because these fundraising entities are bound by law to seek your consent for automated messaging. Read on for more details about modern fundraising practices and what you can do to better keep the fund-raisers at arm's length.
And for more information to prepare you for this election season, read about finding the early voting period in your state and how to determine your registration status.
Automated messages have emerged as a major part of political outreach efforts in the digital age. Text messages, in particular, have become a potent tool for campaign fundraising. Speaking with Time magazine, Alex Quilici, CEO of call-blocking company YouMail, explained that texts are more cost-effective than physical mail or phone calls, and that they have a tendency to encourage more engagement. This is especially true for young people, he added, who are more likely to respond to texts from numbers they don't recognize, than to calls.
The Federal Communications Commission, aka the FCC, requires that these political fundraising entities get your consent for automated messaging, which also means they're required to let you opt out at will.
Most texts you get for political fundraising purposes will include some sort of instructions on how to make the messages stop (commonly by texting "STOP" back at them). It's also possible to try to avoid these messages from the start, with fundraising companies like ActBlue and WinRed noting that it's optional to add your phone number on their forms.
Adding your email, however, usually isn't optional. To opt out of further fundraising emails, you should be able to go to the bottom of any message you receive and find a link that lets you unsubscribe from the current mailing list. You might have to do this a few times across different fundraising messages, because your information might've ended up on multiple lists used by fundraising operations.
If
you
suspect
that
an
email
you've
received
is
not
a
run-of-the-mill
annoying
fundraising
prompt
but
instead
a
phishing
scheme
in
disguise,
you
should
do
two
things:
First,
under
no
circumstances
click
through
their
links
or
give
them
any
information
about
yourself.
Second,
forward
the
message
to
the
Anti-Phishing
Working
Group
at
For more, find out what each major presidential candidate has said about the child tax credit.
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