Politicians recognize they give up a degree of privacy when they run for office.Click here to read the full story.
But Democrats are testing the outer limits of that understanding with a practice that raises questions about when campaign tracking becomes something more like stalking.
While most serious campaigns on both sides use campaign trackers — staffers whose job is to record on video every public appearance and statement by an opponent — House Democrats are taking it to another level. They’re now recording video of the homes of GOP congressmen and candidates and posting the raw footage on the Internet for all to see.
(Also on POLITICO: VIDEO: Most negative ads of 2012)
That ratcheting up of the video surveillance game is unnerving Republicans who insist that even by political standards, it’s a gross invasion of privacy. Worse, they say, it creates a safety risk for members of Congress and their families at a time when they are already on edge after a deranged gunman shot former Arizona Democratic Rep. Gabrille Giffords 18 months ago.
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Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Desperate Dems Dig Dirt, Deprivatize Domiciles
Politico is out with a revealing report on how Democrats are bringing negative campaign politics to a new, dangerously low level. Heres an excerpt:
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