FEC says Google can let political campaigns dodge Gmail’s spam filters
The Federal Elections Commission has rubber stamped a proposal from Google that could make it easier for political campaigns to skirt email spam filters. Commissioners voted 4-1 to approve a Gmail pilot, agreeing with Google that the program wouldn’t run afoul of election rules, as The Washington Post reports.
In June, Google asked the FEC to review a plan that would enable emails from “authorized candidate committees, political party committees and leadership political action committees registered with the FEC” to bypass spam filters — as long as they don’t break Gmail rules on illegal content, malware and phishing. The FEC opened the proposal for comment and, as The Verge notes, almost all of the feedback from the public was negative. The Democratic National Committee, for one, claimed the program would benefit Republicans and subject Gmail users to “abusive fundraising tactics.”
At the FEC’s open meeting on Thursday, Democratic commissioner Ellen Weintraub voiced concerns about the program only being available to political committees. “That to me raises all sorts of alarm bells because that sounds like the classic definition of an in-kind contribution,” she said.
Currently, campaign emails often skip Gmail’s inbox precisely because many other …read more

