Culture Visitors Paying Top Dollar for 'U.S. Election Tour' Are Disrupting Real Voter Turnout Efforts - A U.K. company is selling bespoke American political safaris for $4,500 a head, and canvassers do not always welcome their visits.

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The text came Saturday afternoon, from a friend heavily involved in voter turnout work here in Philadelphia. Details were still fuzzy, but it appeared that what my friend suspected to be far-right actors were showing up to local Get Out the Vote (GOTV) canvass launches and attempting to derail them.

It was a sobering thing to hear, but not entirely unexpected—Philadelphia is, after all, the biggest blue dot in a critical battleground state. If Republicans managed to sabotage efforts to educate and activate voters here, it could pay big dividends.


The buzz grew, and with it, a general sense of bafflement. The disruptors’ general M.O. seemed to be subjecting organizers to an unceasing barrage of questions about U.S. politics and partisanship. Even more strangely, they all seemed to come from outside the country.

More details emerged: This band of English- and Australian-accented attendees had shown up to at least one canvass launch alongside real volunteers, but showed little interest in the actual work of GOTV. As the unpaid canvassers picked up their materials and attempted to learn to knock doors, the international interlopers disrupted proceedings with an unending stream of granular questions about the electoral process, right down to the cellular software used to distribute street walk lists.

Group texts flew. Finally, someone shared a link: politicaltours.com.

There was an explanation for these happenings, it seemed, that beggared belief. These disrupters were paying tourists—clients of Political Tours, a company selling on-the-ground U.S. electoral proceedings as immersive safari experiences to those who could afford their services. Political Tours’ business model apparently involved showing up to volunteer GOTV events unannounced with clients in tow, treating campaign workers and canvass managers as involuntary entertainers and tasking them with satisfying these tourists’ prurient interest in the collapse of U.S. democracy.

Founded by former New York Times Balkans foreign correspondent Nicholas Wood in 2011, Political Tours invites paying tourists to “get under the skin of a country” and explore its political workings, led by a team of “experts.” “[T]he tours are like being in a documentary film,” gushes their marketing copy, “unique, exciting and stimulating; an experience you will never forget.” Wood’s outfit promises its clients a front row seat on the ground in some of the most important races in the country—even if it disrupts the workings of critical campaigns. (Wood told Jezebel the group had been invited to participate in canvass launches by one local organization, but admitted that other organizations and hosts involved in the effort may not initially have been aware of the tourists’ presence or expectations for the event).

The American election tour comes with a hefty price tag: £3950.00, or a little over $4,500. As their website makes clear, the company sees itself as providing an adventure experience, a way to parachute into some of the most turbulent, complex, and problematic political situations in the world. They boast about connecting clients with acolytes of the Ayatollah in Tehran, West Bank settlers and spy chiefs in Israel, and television propagandists in Russia.

Disconcertingly, Wood has decided that the 2022 U.S. midterm elections are a perfect fit for his electoral disaster tourism brand. The Political Tours itinerary for its midterms “tour” begins in Philadelphia, where participants are invited to “take a look at local politics as well as the economic and social issues facing many of this city’s residents.” At a moment where John Fetterman signs dot most neighborhoods in the city, they proclaim—bizarrely—that “the Democratic party’s candidates across the state are struggling to get the support here they need.” (Full disclosure: I am a Democratic committeeperson in Philadelphia).

Although in some instances Political Tours appears to have contacted Philadelphia community members before simply appearing in their space (over the weekend, a well-known local organizer posted warmly to Instagram about the tour’s presumably arranged visit to a South Philadelphia church this past Sunday), not all of these “experiences” were provided with the consent or knowledge of election workers.

As a result, a voter turnout apparatus already in full swing and at full capacity has had to divert energy and resources to warning their volunteers and campaign partners about the possibility of British tourists showing up to and potentially derailing canvass operations, which comprise perhaps the single most critical local GOTV measure in the lead-up to the election. One prominent local organization involved in elections even advised local organizations and launch hosts to remove physical addresses for canvassing events from public-facing announcements and materials. Meanwhile, Political Tours’ website still cheerfully boasts about their planned stop for election day tomorrow: “We’ll pick some key battles to follow and head to the polling stations to see voting.”

For those of us who grew up in and live in the United States, it’s easy to forget the degree to which our elections are a source of fascination overseas. The impact of our political choices are felt around the world. The very existence of the Political Tours midterms tour reflects something newer and more terrifying than our disproportionate impact on global geopolitics, however—it’s a telling sign of an increasing international consensus that U.S. elections are less a matter of democracy than a dystopic spectacle, a Third World curiosity for citizens of less turbulent nations to marvel and gape at. Philadelphia gun violence, Black churches, war stories about the January 6th capitol siege: It’s all now marketable content for international disaster tourism.

And if that disaster tourism disrupts the work of those making a final, last-ditch effort to preserve democracy in the states? Well, what a great set-up for the next tour.

https://jezebel.com/visitors-paying...ction-tour-are-d-1849754255?rev=1667918137090 (Archive)
 
This is unironically how the rest of the world views amerimutt """elections""". A comedy drama to be laughed and pointed at. My favourite was the "hanging chads" series in 2000. I still can't believe the idiot cowboy won but I suppose you have to suspend your disbelief when watching this kind of fiction. He was funnier than his on-screen dad in fairness.
 
This is unironically how the rest of the world views amerimutt """elections""". A comedy drama to be laughed and pointed at. My favourite was the "hanging chads" series in 2000. I still can't believe the idiot cowboy won but I suppose you have to suspend your disbelief when watching this kind of fiction. He was funnier than his on-screen dad in fairness.
This is how a lot of Americans view American elections.
 
Oi, do you have a loicense to ask NPCs how the system works?

Also good. Fuck door knockers. I was watching the Wu Flu thread back when it was racist to and those fucking plague bearers wouldn't leave me alone and they never got shat on for killing grandma.
 
"We're running a mumbling retard in a corrupt city that breaks election laws, and they're treating it as a collapse of democracy? REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE"

It's telling that their first response to being asked honest questions is to panic about FAR RIGHT ACTORS. This is the exact mechanics of Twitter lunacy, happening IRL, without irony.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Elim Garak
Why would you pay $4,500 to view something that is completely free? I mean the cost of a flight, hotel and rental car can't possibly be that much.

Eh, whatever. Maybe I should start charging Australians $5k each for the Rust Belt Experience in Gary or Detroit.
 
Why would you pay $4,500 to view something that is completely free? I mean the cost of a flight, hotel and rental car can't possibly be that much.

Eh, whatever. Maybe I should start charging Australians $5k each for the Rust Belt Experience in Gary or Detroit.
Probably a combination of last minute booking and expertise.

Last minute booking because if you plan too far in advance, the cows will reschedule. Also tour guides might need to monitor the situation to pick the lulziest cities based on the latest news.

Expertise is just making sure they only visit events that are safe to visit - no "mostly peaceful protests" when the workers get agitated, no Karens ready to dox you for asking a question.

If they're really putting in a lot of effort into it, they might even need to hire minorities to travel with the group so any attempts to evict them carry a risk that someone will scream oppression.
 
Why pay for a trip fee when you can start a brawl yourself and pay the jail fee?
it's not the Taiwan parliament

but yeah I wouldn't fault limeys or anybody else showing up to gawk at us burgermonkeys dancing
I've had plenty of fun watching Brit tourists suffering through Central Florida summers, only fair they can have some fun too
 
If they're really putting in a lot of effort into it, they might even need to hire minorities to travel with the group so any attempts to evict them carry a risk that someone will scream oppression.
The UK does have a long history of hiring racial mercenaries for various purposes.
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Fomo Hoire
On your right, there's a straight ticket Republican. On your left, there's a straight ticket Democrat. Who's this sleeping in the middle of the road? A drug addict. Now let's check Wal-Mart out.
 
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