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Secretary of State Project

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Secretary of State Project
SoS Project logo.gif
Basic facts
Type:527 group/Political action committee
Affiliation:Democratic
Founder(s):Becky Bond, Michael Kieschnick and James Rucker
Year founded:2006


The Secretary of State Project, also known as the SoS Project, was an independent 527 political organization founded in July 2006 for the purpose of advancing "election protection" measures. Members believed that the only way in which to accomplish such a goal was to devote all efforts and resources toward helping get Democrats elected to the offices of Secretary of State in select battleground states, specifically those whose margin of victory in the 2004 presidential election contest was 120,000 votes or less.

The SoS Project ceased activity in 2010. Its website was taken down in 2012.

Founders

Becky Bond

As of May 2017, Bond was the president of the CREDO Super PAC and the political director of CREDO mobile, both part of CREDO, a progressive grassroots activist network, which she first joined in 2000. She was also a member of the board of directors for New Organizing Institute (NOI), an organization that, according to its website, aims to train progressive grassroots organizers.[1][2][3][4]

Michael Kieschnick

In addition to the SoS Project, Kieschnick served as president of Working Assets, also known as Credo Mobile, which provided more than 300,000 customers across the United States with long-distance and wireless telephone services and credit cards. The company also donated nearly $60 million since its founding in 1985 to progressive organizations such as ACORN, the ACLU, Color of Change, Democracy Now!, Greenpeace International, NARAL Pro-Choice America Foundation, People for the American Way, the Planned Parenthood Federation of America and Project Vote.[5]

James Rucker

For two years beginning in 2003, Rucker served as Director of Grassroots Mobilization for MoveOn Political Action and MoveOn Civic Action. He ran the Color of Change, online activist organization that aimed to strengthen the voice of blacks in the United States. The organization raised media awareness for the cause in support of the Jena Six and led the charge for a boycott of Glenn Beck's highly rated Fox News Channel program after the conservative personality called President Obama a racist. He co-founded the political group with former green jobs czar and self-proclaimed Communist Anthony "Van" Jones.

Democracy Alliance

The SoS Project stemmed largely from the Democracy Alliance, a self-described liberal organization founded in 2005 whose long-term objective was to raise $200 million to develop a funding clearinghouse for progressive groups.[6]

Donations

A number of Democracy Alliance Partners contributed to the SoS Project, including Gail Furman ($20,000), Daniel Berger ($10,000), George Soros ($10,000), Susie T. Buell ($5,000), Drummond Pike ($5,000) and Ashindi Maxton ($300).

As a 527 political organization, the Secretary of State Project "can accept unlimited financial contributions and doesn't have to disclose them publicly until well after the election."[7] Click on the tables below to view donations made to the organization for the 2006 and 2008 election cycles.

2008 Election cycle

2006 Election cycle

Contributions

Open the table below to view candidate contributions made by the Secretary of State Project in 2006 and 2008:

See also

External links

Footnotes