Giving Credit Where Credit Is Due
June 30th, 2008We recently received a thank you letter from the United States Department of State. The letter recognized our accomplishments and the knowledge we were able to provide for the international reporters. The letter reads as followed:
Dear Richard & Adelaide,
Thank you again for hosting the group of foreign journalist visiting the United States on the Foreign Press Center reporting tour “The Nuts & Bolts of an American Election: An Insider Look at How to Run an Election.”
Our June 4 visit to your beautiful ranch was really a highlight of their trip to the U.S. And I’m not just saying that—their evaluation forms and comments proved how impressed they were by Project Vote Smart’s goals, work, and spirit. One of the journalists wrote that the visit to Project Vote Smart “showed than even ordinary citizens can make a difference when it comes to elections.”
The visit helped them understand the idea of transparency and voter education, two crucial components of our democracy. And several of them commented after our visit how surprised they were that American youths have such a strong sense of volunteerism and activist spirit.
I hope that you would be willing to let future groups visiting the United States come to your ranch. Thank you again!
Sincerely,
Stacy MacTaggert
Program Officer for East Asia & the Pacific
Washington Foreign Press Center
Having visitors at our Great Divide Ranch is an essential part of spreading the word about PVS. They have visited the Ranch and found it to be a beneficial and unique way to understand the workings and the mission behind Project Vote Smart. We encourage national journalists to take advantage of the opportunity to learn about PVS by visiting us here in beautiful Montana. If international journalists can recognize our hard work and dedication, national journalists should be elated that such valuable information is available through our organization. This is a big step in Project Vote Smart’s history, and we will continue to work hard and be available to the public to help increase our awareness.



When I first began on the bus, I did not anticipate the reception that it would receive from citizens, tv stations, and newspapers alike. Now, after a few months away, I can really see why the bus is so well received. Sure it is bold in color and huge in size, but it really is the message that people are attracted to. Being in California before Super Tuesday allowed me to see the ridiculous amounts of political ads. Citizens are inundated with ads on every issue. The same thing was witnessed again this week in Pennsylvania. Every commercial break contains political spots for both democratic contestants, as well as spots for the local races. It is clear that the things that Project Vote Smart is trying to navigate through- rhetoric, spin, money- are only increasing in the political process. It is an uphill battle, but you take the small victories - a class of Erie high school students eager to vote for the first time, a Howard University janitor asking how to register to vote, multiple Howard Students asking how they can donate money, a St. Joe’s student telling us she would tell all her friends about PVS, a Youngstown State student saying that we made her week. Yeah it’s the little things that keep you going, the little things that make living on a bus, traveling each day, being away from home, a bed, a working toilet tolerable, and it is the little things that will hopefully help Project Vote Smart make big changes