Here are two thought experiments. Indulge me, won’t you?
It’s the morning after Election Day. 8
a.m. You stumble out of bed. Make some oatmeal. Turn on the TV to
find out what happened in that Senate race, the one that was too close
to call all night. But you gave $5 to the DSCC
by clicking on this link.
And, lo and behold, your favorite Democrat — maybe Russ Feingold or
Patty Murray — pulled it out by a few votes. Oatmeal never tasted so
sweet.
But there’s another way it could go. 8
a.m. Oatmeal. TV. But in this example, you DIDN’T give to the DSCC.
And, by a few hundred votes, some Tea Party extremist is now a U.S.
Senator-elect — and Republicans have captured the majority. How’s that
oatmeal taste now?
You
still have time to decide which scenario will become reality. But when
I say “time,” I don’t mean days. I mean minutes. Don’t wait for
tomorrow. Don’t even wait to read the rest of this email. Click here
right now and make a contribution of $5 or more — it will be matched two
to one, tripling its impact!
You’ve seen the polls — we’re neck and
neck in race after race. Moving the numbers just a little bit could
mean the difference between victory and defeat — trust me, I’ve been
there.
And nobody moves numbers like the DSCC.
Thanks to people like you clicking on links like this one, we’ve pulled
ahead in California and Connecticut and tied it up in Colorado and
Pennsylvania.
But with just hours to go until the
polls close, every minute counts. Your contribution won’t be funding
some far-off future plan — it’ll be the money that goes out the door
first thing tomorrow. It could be your $5 that makes the difference for
Barbara Boxer, keeps Sharron Angle or Rand Paul out of the Senate, or
even saves our majority.
So
make a contribution of $5 or more to the DSCC right now — it’ll be on
the air in a battleground state or in the field as part of a
get-out-the-vote program by tomorrow morning. And, even better, it will
be matched two-to-one, tripling its impact.
If you want to know why I’m standing
with the DSCC in the final days of this election, here’s why: On
November 3, I don’t want my oatmeal to taste like regret. I want my
oatmeal to taste like victory.
How about you?
Thanks,
Al Franken