Americans for Prosperity (AFP), the right-wing campaign funded in part by the energy billionaires the Koch brothers, is working with the Tea Party movement to increase its impact through the use of new media and social networking.
At a Tea Party convention in Virginia this week, the AFP sponsored a workshop called Online Activism 101 to train members in the political use of the Internet. Delegates were given an AFP publication called Grassroots Activist Handbook as well as detailed advice on how to set up their own blogs, spread the word through Facebook and Twitter and lobby their local politicians.
Erik Telford, AFP’s director of online strategy and a leading figure on the right in the deployment of the Internet as a political tool, exhorted Tea Party members to attack politicians through their blogs.
“Pick your least favorite public official and beat the crap out of him every day,” Telford told the audience. “It’s fun, and people will start to notice and you will have a tremendous impact.”
“The way to beat the left is to link more and more to one another, and to link to articles that are in tune with our ideology and that will push the articles to the top of Google search,” he said.
Telford is an expert in the political exploitation of the Internet, an area in which the Democrats proved to be superior in the 2008 presidential race, but where conservatives have since regained the initiative.
AFP’s funding sources are secret. A large, though undisclosed, amount of its resources come from the Koch brothers, who started the group in 2004.
David Koch has denied any links to the Tea Party, but AFP’s sponsorship of the workshop and its training on how to take on the political left through blogs, video posting on YouTube and social networking suggests a more direct link.
“We don’t push people to pursue any interests other than their own. The influence the Kochs have on us is greatly overstated. Their contributions to us are small compared to the 60,000 donors we have,” Telford said.
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