So what does ACORN actually do, anyway?
The embattled community organizing group is much in the news these days, thanks to the idiocies of a handful of now-suspended staffers having been filmed and YouTubed by a right-wing sting squad. Most of the stories present ACORN as, at best, a shady organization up to no good in America’s inner cities, not to mention the nation’s primary source of voting fraud.
What’s been obscured amid all the polemics, or the polemics passing as news reports, is what ACORN is and does. Founded in Little Rock in 1970 as an organization agitating for free school lunches, Vietnam veterans’ rights and more hospital emergency rooms, ACORN has grown in the past four decades into the nation’s largest community organizing group. Based in low-income neighborhoods, it has nearly 500,000 dues-paying members, recruited by door-to-door canvassers, with chapters in 110 cities in 40 states. Nationwide, it has more than 1,000 staffers.
What are the projects on which all these staffers and members work? Raising the minimum wage, for one. ACORN conceived and led the successful initiative campaign to raise the wage in Florida in 2004 and in four more states in 2006. In the past four years, it successfully pressured seven legislatures in other states to raise their minimum wage as well.
Another major campaign has been to limit the interest and fees that banks charge homeowners. In the 1990s, ACORN spearheaded a number of legal actions, often joined by states’ attorneys general, that compelled such lenders as Citigroup to change many of their practices. The group has led successful drives to outlaw the most egregious predatory lending in nine states. It also counsels thousands of inner-city homeowners and home buyers.
ACORN’s third focus has been to expand the electorate. In the 2007-08 election cycle, it registered 1.3 million new voters in the nation’s inner cities. This activity particularly vexed many Republican politicians, who have repeatedly accused the organization of massive voter fraud. The Bush administration’s politicization of the Justice Department — its widely reported firing of U.S. attorneys for their failure to bring voter fraud indictments (all of them looked and could find scarcely any instances of same) — stemmed from the administration’s apparent desire to depress minority turnout, a goal it sought to accomplish by demonizing ACORN.
News coverage
Now, how much of this would you know from following the stories about ACORN that have been running in even the best of the media? Little to nothing, as Peter Dreier, a professor of politics at Occidental College, and Christopher R. Martin, a professor of journalism at University of Northern Iowa, just concluded in an exhaustive study of news coverage of ACORN. Looking at the 647 stories on the group that ran in leading newspapers and broadcast networks in 2007 and 2008, they found that not only did a majority of such stories focus on allegations of voter fraud but also that 83 percent of the stories that linked ACORN to those allegations failed to mention that actual instances of voter fraud were all but nonexistent.
“Only a handful of the stories in The New York Times, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal,” Dreier and Martin note, “mentioned that actual cases of voter fraud were very rare” — even though all three papers had covered the firings of the U.S. attorneys for their failure to find such cases. But the steady drumbeat from right-wing pundits and journalists about ACORN and voter fraud, the authors conclude, eventually set the terms of discussion even at elite mainstream media.
Nonetheless, the mainstream media have also come under attack for not giving greater play to the most recent round of alleged ACORN scandals because the stories were first aired on the TV broadcasts of such right-wing polemicists as Glenn Beck.
Dreier and Martin also note that newspapers in cities where ACORN has long been active against predatory lending and in voter registration — they studied the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, the Minneapolis Star Tribune and the Cleveland Plain Dealer — provided more balanced stories and relied less on partisan sources than the national papers did.
X Meyerson is editor-at-large of American Prospect and the L.A. Weekly.
Comments
What ever ACORN started out as it is time to shut them down. In fact it is over due. For years they have been in the center of voter registration fraud. We get the usual people fired, bad apples etc. Their defense we do more good than harm. Much like the defense of the UAW and the fact their wage and benefits make it impossible to make a profit let alone the monthly start in the red due to retirees. But they give back so much in charity.
Everyone just loves me right now.
But the fact remains until these videos were shot. ACORN still had project vote, still had the census, still had funding rolling off our tax dollars, still had the backing of the IRS in tax help, still had more money rolling in for housing.
And believe me people have been throwing up red flags falling on death ears about them. One reason I wanted McCain Palin to win was I knew there would be a full blown investigation on these people.
I do not care if the camera was hidden and if it was just one city the bad apple thing might hold ground. But 4 cities points and says corruption. Thank God the Census, IRS and some funding has been yanked from them. Now it is time for a audit, RICO Act and time for people to go to jail and close the doors for good.
Of course this is golden to a Conservative right now it is up there with a blue dress. Simple fact last we were being told ACORN is good with good people. Obama went there to work when he could have gone anywhere.
He was their lawyer, he taught others there. He became a Community Organizer for ACORN and now he was running for president. So it had to be a good thing at least the MSM played it that way.
Well now we know different and some of us have known it longer. So stick with it on the left Obama is ACORN and ACORN is Obama, in fact I like the name Obamacorn. I think it fits in a lot of ways.