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Approve Ref. 71's talking points
Posted by Times reporter Susan Kelleher
No ballots have been counted, but the Approve Ref. 71 campaign – the group seeking to uphold the state’s same-sex domestic partnership law – already have a handle on why they won. Or lost.
Already being circulated are what sound like talking points to be used in case the measure loses. The backgrounder, prepared by Pyramid Communications, noted that the election was “challenging to win” because of an off-election year, an anti-tax measure that attracted more conservative voters, dishonest opponents and supporters who thought the law was a shoo-in.
The backgrounder also cited the time and money supporters spent addressing the peripheral issue of whether Washington’s secretary of state should reveal the names of people who signed petitions to put the law to a public vote.
If the law is upheld and their campaign is successful, Approve Ref. 71 can claim credit for a strategy that targeted faith communities and minorities, civic groups, unions and large employers, including Microsoft, Boeing, Google and Starbucks, according to the backgrounder.

GENEVIEVE ALVAREZ
Approve Ref 71 party getting started.
Feb 8 - 1:52 PM Vancouver activist asks court to toss state redistricting plan
Feb 7 - 1:36 PM Teacher evaluation bills to be ressurected in Senate committee
Feb 6 - 3:35 PM Senate Ways and Means chairman floats tax proposals
Feb 6 - 3:30 PM Rethinking the Discover Pass in Olympia


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88
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