DCCC Disinformation Task Force Goes MIA

July 21, 2020

Another story just came out detailing Democrats’ fake news syndicate that’s being funded by liberal dark money groups, and yet, the DCCC still hasn’t commented on the group’s shady operations.

You would think the DCCC who went out of its way to tout its “Disinformation Task Force” designed to “combat false information” would want to stop an organization whose sole intent is to mislead voters.

I recommend asking DCCC Chairwoman and former journalist Cheri Bustos what she thinks about ACRONYM’s fake news factories that are aiding Democratic Congressional candidates across the country and detailed below:

Liberal, dark-money-funded Courier Newsroom targets battleground states’ voters with Democratic talking points billed as news

Fox News

Brian Flood

7/21/2020

https://www.foxnews.com/media/liberal-dark-money-funded-courier-newsroom-targets-voters-democratic-talking-points-news

A far-left website called Courier Newsroom has managed to drive liberal messaging in key states online and on social media, with piles of cash and no financial disclosure — but former Nevada Attorney General Adam Paul Laxalt thinks it will soon “erode the public’s trust in media” if the business model is allowed to continue.

Courier Newsroom, tied to a multibillion dollar left-wing dark money operation, has strategically placed websites in key battleground states running “news stories” that often appear to be little more than Democratic Party talking points. The same operation also promotes its content on social media platforms and places expensive ads on Facebook, where it’s categorized as a Media/News organization.

Newsroom or PAC? Liberal group muddies online information wars

Politico

Alex Thompson

07/14/2020

https://www.politico.com/news/2020/07/14/newsroom-pac-liberal-info-wars-356800

Rep. Max Rose, one of the most vulnerable Democrats in Congress this November, couldn’t have written a better headline himself.

“Rep. Max Rose Deploys With National Guard to Get Hospital Ready For Coronavirus Patients,” read an April 17 article about the freshman congressman from New York. The article — boosted into circulation in New York by thousands of dollars in targeted Facebook ads — was mostly a rewrite of the congressman’s press release from the previous day. The same thing happened the next month: A May 28 press release touting coronavirus legislation of Rose’s quickly turned into an article with almost exactly the same headline as the release.