Swing
state
voters
are
being
inundated
with
text
messages
seemingly
designed
to
look
like
they’re
coming
from
supporters
of
Vice
President
Kamala
Harris
or
even
from
her
campaign
itself.
Some
of
the
messages
imply
that
Harris
is
misleading
the
public
about
her
efforts
to
secure
a
ceasefire
in
the
Israel-Hamas
war
in
Gaza,
while
others
say
she
has
“pledged
to
support
Israel
as
they
wage
their
war
in
Gaza.”
Although
the
texts
are
written
to
sound
like
standard
campaign
mass
messaging,
they
contain
no
call
to
action
or
URL
to
a
campaign
site.
But
most
bizarrely,
the
sender
will
reiterate
and
emphasize
that
Harris
“will
always
stand
with
Israel”
if
the
recipient
replies
identifying
themselves
as
pro-Palestinian.
“I
want
to
make
sure
we
set
the
record
straight,”
reads
one
message
that
voters
in
Michigan
and
Pennsylvania
shared
with
The
Verge.
“The
Kamala
Harris
campaign
has
been
running
conflicting
ads
about
where
she
stands
on
Israel.
It
is
just
what
she
has
to
do
to
be
able
to
win.
I
am
reaching
out
to
make
sure
you
know
Kamala
will
always
stand
with
Israel.”
The
Verge
spoke
to
two
Pennsylvania
voters
and
three
people
in
Michigan
who
all
received
similar
text
messages.
According
to
internal
communications
seen
by
The
Verge,
the
texts
traced
back
to
a
company
called
Wonder
Cave.
The
vendor,
based
in
Charlotte,
North
Carolina,
works
with
Twenty
Manor,
a
digital
advocacy
and
fundraising
company
founded
by
Adam
Waldeck,
a
longtime
Republican
strategist.
Twenty
Manor
and
Wonder
Cave
did
not
respond
to
The
Verge’s
request
for
comment.
Between
May
and
September,
Twenty
Manor
was
paid
over
$12,000
from
Defend
Freedom,
Tulsi
Gabbard’s
leadership
PAC,
primarily
for
“digital
consulting,”
according
to
disclosures
filed
with
the
Federal
Election
Commission.
In
the
last
year,
Twenty
Manor
received
nearly
$33,000
from
the
National
Republican
Senatorial
Committee
(NRSC)
for
text
messaging.
The
NRSC
also
paid
Twenty
Manor
over
$13,000
in
July
for
“list
rental,”
and
the
Republican
National
Committee
paid
the
company
over
$11,000
in
April
for
list
acquisition.
(The
Trump
National
Committee
PAC
has
also
paid
Twenty
Manor
in
disbursements
marked
as
“fundraising
fees.”)
The
PACs
did
not
immediately
respond
to
The
Verge’s
requests
for
comment.
Other
groups
have
attempted
a
similar
playbook
during
this
election:
text
messages
seemingly
from
pro-Harris
organizations,
purporting
to
describe
a
Harris
agenda
but
pushing
divisive,
misleading,
or
even
false
messaging.
Those
previous
iterations
—
centered
around
a
fake
initiative
called
Progress
2028
—
were
backed
by
Building
America’s
Future,
a
pro-Trump
dark
money
group
that
has
reportedly
received
funding
from
Elon
Musk,
according
to
reporting
by
OpenSecrets.
The
Progress
2028
texts
appear
to
be
targeted
at
moderate
Democrats
and
anti-Trump
Republicans
and
claim
that
Harris
supports
mandatory
gun
buybacks
and
policies
that
would
make
it
easier
for
undocumented
immigrants
to
get
driver’s
licenses.
Building
America’s
Future
did
not
respond
to
The
Verge’s
request
for
comment.
These
Israel-Palestine
texts
sent
to
voters
in
Michigan
and
Pennsylvania
are
written
in
a
similar
format
but
have
instead
been
sent
to
left-leaning
Democrats.
The
Harris
campaign
declined
to
comment.
One
person
started
receiving
the
ostensibly
pro-Harris
texts
on
Saturday
and
initially
believed
they
were
being
sent
by
the
Harris
campaign
Kumars
Salehi,
an
assistant
professor
at
the
University
of
Pittsburgh,
told
The
Verge
he
started
receiving
the
ostensibly
pro-Harris
texts
on
Saturday
and
initially
believed
they
were
being
sent
by
the
Harris
campaign.
Salehi,
a
longtime
pro-Palestinian
activist,
engaged
with
the
senders,
saying
Harris’
support
for
Israel
is
the
reason
he
didn’t
want
to
vote
for
her.
In
response,
he
was
sent
a
link
to
a
Times
of
Israel
story
highlighting
Harris’
claim
that
she
is
“unequivocal
and
unwavering
in
my
commitment
to
Israel’s
defense
and
its
ability
to
defend
itself.”
“I
encourage
you
to
check
this
out
to
learn
more
about
her
positions,
which
you
can
share
with
your
friends
and
family,”
the
sender
told
Salehi.
Salehi,
who
described
himself
as
a
“pragmatic”
Harris
voter
who
wants
to
avoid
the
additional
harms
of
a
Trump
presidency,
said
the
fact
that
he’d
already
decided
to
vote
for
Harris
was
part
of
the
reason
he
engaged
with
the
messages
in
the
first
place.
“The
first
one
honestly
confused
me.
Like,
‘Holy
shit,
there’s
no
way
she’s
going
with
this
tactic.’”
Another
Pennsylvania
voter
who
declined
to
be
named
shared
eight
texts
they’ve
received
since
November
2nd.
“The
first
one
honestly
confused
me.
Like,
‘Holy
shit,
there’s
no
way
she’s
going
with
this
tactic,’”
the
voter,
a
registered
Democrat
who
lives
in
a
Philadelphia
suburb,
told
The
Verge.
“I
realized
it
had
to
be
opposition,
faking
as
a
supporter,
when
it
said
‘It’s
just
what
she
has
to
do
to
win.’”
Zach,
a
Michigan
voter
who
declined
to
give
his
last
name,
said
he’s
been
getting
explicitly
pro-Israel
Harris
texts
“at
least
once
a
day”
since
October
24th.
“After
a
few
of
these
I
started
replying
that
I
don’t
support
Israel,”
Zach
told
The
Verge.
“This
campaign’s
follow
up
responses
directed
me
to
an
NBC
article
about
Kamala
shutting
down
pro-Palestinian
protestors
at
an
event,
and
asked
me
to
share
that
link
with
my
friends
and
family.
I
got
this
same
link
in
response
about
4
times.”
Unlike
the
voters
in
Pennsylvania,
Zach
isn’t
registered
with
any
political
party
but
generally
votes
in
Democratic
primary
elections.
This
year,
he
was
one
of
more
than
100,000
Michigan
residents
who
selected
“uncommitted”
in
the
state’s
Democratic
primary,
a
protest
option
for
voters
who
disapprove
of
President
Joe
Biden’s
handling
of
the
Israel-Hamas
war.
Zach
said
he
was
suspicious
of
the
texts
because
he
had
seen
a
Chris
Hayes
segment
about
anti-Harris
dark
money
campaigns
aiming
vastly
different
ads
at
microtargeted
voter
segments
in
Michigan
and
Pennsylvania,
based
on
reporting
from
404
Media.
“A
lot
of
time
passed
before
I
realized
it
was
fake,”
said
Salehi,
whose
X
posts
about
the
interactions
went
viral.
“I
didn’t
realize
until
it
was
way
too
late
that
they
were
trying
to
get
the
exact
reaction
out
of
me
that
I
was
giving
them.”
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