With our free press under threat and federal funding for public media gone, your support matters more than ever. Help keep the LAist newsroom strong, become a monthly member or increase your support today.
How to decode those political mailers clogging up your mailbox
A political science class at Fullerton College is sorting through campaign mailers to learn how to decode attack ads and who pays for them, and to understand how candidates try to sway voters. There are some lessons for the rest of us, too.
The assignment
In Jodi Balma's political science class recently, students broke into groups with piles of mailers sent out in the 45th Congressional district, where incumbent Republican Michelle Steel is facing off against Democrat Derek Tran. Students tallied up the negative and positive ads, analyzed the colors and messaging, and noted who paid for them.
What's the point?
Balma said learning how to "diagnose" campaign ads is a skill students can take throughout their voting life.
"When you actually critically look at it in a classroom, you get a very different perspective than when it's in your mailbox," Balma said. "And so teaching that skill stays with the students forever."
A few tips about campaign mailers:
- Generally, political ads have to disclose who paid for them. California's Fair Political Practices Committee (FPPC) has a handy fact sheet that lays out the basic rules.
- If you think an ad violates the rules, you can upload a photo of it or send a link to the FPPC's enforcement division and they'll review it.
- Voting early can help slow the flood of campaign ads to your mailbox. Sophisticated campaigns tailor their mailers to people they think they can sway.
Still working your way through the ballot? Head over to LAist.com/Vote for a guide to help you fill out your ballot.
We don't do endorsements. But we do help you break down the races, measures and issues that impact you most of all.
-
12,000 people will be approved this time around. The waitlist opened at 8 a.m. on Sept. 18.
-
Hundreds of veterans who have severe disabilities from their service can’t get housing because their disability compensation puts them just over the income threshold for housing aid.
-
They were all but extinct. Now there are so many that scientists need your help tracking and studying them as they spread upriver.
-
According to the City of Los Angeles, the car company can break ground on the project.
-
Councilmember Traci Park, who introduced the motion, said if the council failed to act on Friday, the home could be lost as early as the afternoon.
-
Caused by a type of plankton, the blue bioluminescent waves aren’t toxic to humans, but have a profound impact on marine life.