CAMPAIGN 2012

Mitt Romney's Cyberwar on Rick Perry

Updated: October 18, 2011 | 1:58 p.m.
October 18, 2011 | 1:44 p.m.

Atlantic Wire

Latest Politics Posts:
Loading feed...

Mitt Romney is going negative on Rick Perry, and he's using one of the most tried-and-true methods: the Internet. Today, Romney for President Inc. launched CareerPolitician.com, an anti-Rick Perry website aimed at undermining the former Massachusetts governor's best-funded opponent. The only content on the site is a 60-second Web video slamming Perry for Texas's 1 million unemployed and the fact that “nearly half of new jobs in Texas over the last four years went to illegal immigrants.” Still, the website's "coming soon" sign suggests this is just the site's opening salvo. And that's just one anti-Rick Perry site. A Monday report in The Washington Post shows other anti-Perry Web domain names are being gobbled up including stickittorick.com, rickperrynot.com, and buryperry.com.

 

While no one is claiming ownership of the anti-Perry domains, The Post's Philip Rucker and T.W. Farnam note that the same day the domain names were purchased, Romney's campaign bought $2,851 worth of domain names at GoDaddy.com, which was the same vendor that sold the anti-Perry domains. Currently, the domain names don't host any content, but that doesn't mean the Perry camp isn't complaining about them. “The public is more interested in how the candidates can create jobs and improve the economy, not how many domain names you can rack up,” Perry spokesman Mark Miner told The Washington Post. “We’re not running for student body council here. This is for president of the United States.”

Interestingly, there's another campaign that may be gobbling up anti-Perry domains as well: President Obama's. The Post reports that sites such as americansagainstperry.com, christiansagainstperry.com and therealrickperry.net were also purchased. "On Aug. 15, two days after Perry launched his campaign, Obama’s campaign spent $3,958 at Go­Daddy.com. At least 70 domains containing Perry’s name were bought on the same date."

The Internet has not necessarily been kind to Perry in his years of political campaigning. Many will recall his bruising gubernatorial battle against Republican Kay Bailey Hutchison, in which Hutchison's campaign website was juiced with the possible intent of spreading rumors about Perry being gay. Within the site's juicing program were 2,200 hidden phrases, one of which was "rick perry gay." When this was discovered, the Hutchison campaign promptly removed them and issued a somewhat crafty statement. "We did not know these offensive word associations were being searched for by hundreds of thousands of Texans everyday nor do we condone the computer-generated existence on our Web site. They will be removed promptly."

Meanwhile, Perry is going positive today with a new web video promoting his jobs record and experience with energy companies. How quaint! What's a matter, Perry? Afraid to get in the dirt?

Want to stay ahead of the curve? Sign up for National Journal’s AM & PM Must Reads. News and analysis to ensure you don’t miss a thing.

Leave a Comment
The National Journal Group has the right (but not the obligation) to monitor the comments and to remove any materials it deems inappropriate.
Comments powered by Disqus
Follow National Journal
  • NationalJournal on Twitter
  • NationalJournal on Facebook
  • NationalJournal on Tumblr
  • NationalJournal's RSS Feeds
  • NationalJournal's Email Newsletters
  • NationalJournal on iPhone and iPad
Most Read Articles
Columns
Gwen Ifill: Gwen's Take

History's Romance: Why Politics Past Beats Politics Present

May 21, 2012

Is it just my imagination, or have politics and politicians grown smaller?

Matthew Dowd: Common Sense

What Palin Can Teach Obama About Seizing the Moment

May 17, 2012
The president could learn from her well-honed habit of following her gut instincts.
Charlie Cook: Charlie Cook's The Cook Report

The Folly of Crowds

May 17, 2012
Not all opinions are created equal. If you’re a political prognosticator, you learn which ones you can ignore.
More Columns »
Get a trial subscription to National Journal Hotline.