Grand jury indicts fake electors who falsely certified Donald Trump as 2020 winner in Arizona

Proposition 211 protects liberals while it sets up conservatives for harassment

Opinion: Proposition 211 hypocritically shelters a favored group of donors, while setting others up for harassment and intimidation. Vote no on the measure.

Cathi Herrod and Scot Mussi
opinion contributors
Terry Goddard, former Arizona attorney general, speaks during an August news conference about Proposition 211. We think it's a misguided measure.

Why not disclose political donors? It’s an easy question for those exempt from such exposure.

Proposition 211 exempts organizations widely known to favor liberals, while setting up donors of conservative organizations for harassment and intimidation. Moreover, it silences those same organizations for months leading up to an election, while allowing the favored group to make their case over and over right up to Election Day.

The ill-titled “Voters Right to Know Act” requires organizations that spend a certain amount of money on political campaigns to disclose donors, but the effect is a hypocritical license to dox political opponents.

Consider Brendan Eich, the former CEO of Mozilla who was forced out of his position in 2014 by activist bullies bent on destroying opposing views instead of persuading based on merit. Death threats and actual assassination plots are not too much for radical activists who demand their political platform, as well as the right to crush those who happen to hold an opposing view.

Giving them access to donors of opposing political organizations invites more hostile, event violent division in an already toxic environment.

Donors can easily be doxxed, canceled

We cannot deny the cancel culture prevailing today that stacks the cards, filtering out voices that dare to challenge their own, while giving voice to drug cartelsAntifa, and Communist China government propaganda on Twitter and other social media platforms.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg admitted silencing reports on Hunter Biden’s laptop scandal weeks before the 2020 presidential election. YouTube demonetizes conservative voices ensuring popular conservative podcasters receive no revenue from views or advertising.

Conservative talk show host and video creator Dennis Prager found no legal relief after YouTube censored more than 200 videos based on ideology. Washington Post reporter Taylor Lorenz doxxed an anonymous Twitter account holder with whom she disagreed.

Unions, media are shielded from the measure

It’s no wonder authors of Proposition 211 wrote the measure to ensure corporate media, Big Tech and labor unions would be exempt from the convoluted measure. Powerful labor unions can skirt requirements and shield electioneering efforts under their protected partisan “get out the vote” campaign.

Also, the news media would continue to run one-sided reports, columns and editorials echoing liberal talking points every day until the primary and the general election without the inconvenience of an opposing view.

Another view:Voters could end 'dark money' attack ads (or out the attackers)

That is because Proposition  211 bars organizations from even naming candidates within 90 days of an election without offering up their donors for harassment and intimidation. Bombarding voters with one party’s messaging while muzzling the others is effectively election tampering – but completely allowable under Proposition 211.

Ironically, the authors of Proposition 211 are deceiving voters under the guise of exposing deception.

If you enjoy free speech, others must have the same

If the hypocrisy is not enough, consider the court costs. Proposition 211 is quite likely unconstitutional. The U.S. Supreme Court has already ruled in Americans for Prosperity v. Bonta just last year that the First Amendment protects the anonymous support of political organizations.

If you enjoy the right to express your political views, you must also allow others the same. All Americans are equal under the law and the First Amendment’s protection of free speech is unnecessary if it doesn’t protect controversial speech.

Proponents of Proposition 211 deceptively woo voters with a promise to expose “dark money,” without disclosing their own self-serving secrets hidden in the tortuous details of the measure.

A recent guest opinion claims the act will “shine a desperately needed light on political spending, a light that has been missing in Arizona politics.” But what is missing is full disclosure: Proposition 211 hypocritically shelters a favored group of donors, while setting others up for harassment and intimidation.

It doesn’t get much darker than that.

Cathi Herrod, Esq., is president of Center for Arizona Policy Action. Scot Mussi is president of Arizona Fee Enterprise Club. Reach him at Scot@azfree.org; on Twitter: @Cathiherrod@azfec.