Tag: get out the vote
Want To Get Involved In This Election? Put On Some Comfortable Shoes

Want To Get Involved In This Election? Put On Some Comfortable Shoes

Reprinted with permission from AlterNet

As Election Day approaches, it’s oh so easy to dismiss the important role you can play in this election. America is a big country, over 300 million people, but it’s the actions that civic-minded people take that tip the balance. There are so many different ways to help the campaign and try to make a difference.

Now is the time to contact local campaign offices and ask how to help. It’s also the time to talk to friends and family, especially those who are still undecided. It’s about helping other people and participating in our political system. Considering what the stakes are, we can’t afford to just sit back and assume the candidates you intend to vote for will be victorious.

Here’s what I experienced when I jumped into the trenches of our democracy a few weeks ago to register voters in Pennsylvania.

“This trip will take place, rain or shine,” the organizers said. “Please wear comfortable shoes, you will be walking all day. Also bring your lunch, snacks and beverages, as well as sunblock and an umbrella.”

I arrived at Hillary Clinton’s headquarters in Brooklyn, obediently equipped, adorned with Hillary stickers and ready to hop on a bus to campaign for Clinton. The bus was already full. Nearly 40 eager Hillary volunteers had packed every seat, leaving a spillover of approximately 20 disheartened people. Campaign leaders were scrambling to find other ways to get everyone to Pennsylvania. One or two people offered to bring their cars, but they were limited in space, and it was too late to rent a small passenger van. It looked like the trip was off, but keen to do our part, we decided to stay at headquarters and make calls.

Just as I settled in at my phone bank station, our trip leader came over to me and whispered that they had limited space in one car, but they wanted me to go since I was such a devoted regular in the Hillary campaign offices. I squeezed into a compact car with four other campaigners, and we Google-mapped our way to Philadelphia. In the car, we shared campaign stories, made Donald Trump jokes and listened to a random assortment of radio hits.

A few hours later, we pulled into Hillary headquarters in west Philadelphia. The large campaign office was filled with bubbly campaign leaders giving training sessions to volunteers who were going out to designated neighborhoods to register voters. We got our paperwork together, practiced reading from our scripts, and were assigned to a list of specific homes in West Philadelphia. I had a list of 80 houses to conquer.

My group of five drove to our assigned neighborhood, and then we split up to go individually to specific blocks on our list. I noticed right away that I was in a neighborhood that was a mix of orderly homes, dilapidated ones and seemingly abandoned places. But most homes were still lived in, and kids were often out on their front porches playing.

The first few houses on my list were shuttered, and had old mail stuffed in the mailbox slots, which looked like it hadn’t been claimed for months or more. I didn’t bother ringing those bells. The next few houses had a little more life. I quickly realized, hearing roaring cheers through the front door, that I was knocking on doors in the middle of a Philadelphia Eagles football game. Great timing, I thought, but at least everyone would be home, even if they would hate me for the interruption. I mustered the courage to knock.

Mostly women answered the doors, and had to drag the various men of the house away from their TV screens to speak to me. I cheerfully introduced myself, told them I was working for Hillary Clinton and wanted to make sure they were all registered to vote before their Pennsylvania deadline. Most people told me they were already registered, so I’d either offer information about Hillary Clinton, or take the hint to move on down the road. Being in Philadelphia, I was already in a sea of blue voters, who were really excited about bashing the Donald. I was happy to oblige.

But as I got deeper into my list of houses, I started coming across people who were not sure they were registered to vote. These were the moments that would make a difference. This was what this whole day was about.

One woman asked me to sit down with her on her porch and talk to her about Hillary. She was in her 40, and knew she was not registered to vote, nor was her husband, who was inside watching the game. The front door was open, so she would yell inside for him to get his ID and various other materials so he could come outside and register. The three of us sat on their porch and cheerfully filled out registration forms while dishing about the latest Trump mishap. They offered me some water, and I accepted the hydration for my body, as I had now been walking for over two hours. I had accomplished about five registrations at this point, and had one more long block to go.

After a few hours, I was informed that the football game had ended. This was good—everyone would be home with hopefully a spare moment to chat.

One of the next houses I successfully registered had a young man answer the door. He was surprisingly excited to see me, and shared a story about how he canvassed for Obama in the last election. He was very encouraging, and told me this was a great neighborhood to canvass in because “people love Hillary in West Philly.” He said he knew how hard it was to go door to door, but that it was worth it, especially to get people ready before the registration deadline. “Pennsylvania matters,” he said.

After about 80 houses and six hours on my feet in the bright afternoon sun, I was exhausted, yet proud. My hard work had paid off because not only did I successfully help nine people register to vote, I also got the chance to see a community brimming with confidence about how they thought Hillary would triumph handily over Trump. I got to help the Democratic Party and my candidate, by making sure people are ready to cast their vote on election day and be part of the process. And I got to hear a lot of good Trump jokes. He really does have little hands.

The sun had just started to set as I wrapped up my last few houses. I saw a 9-year-old girl playing outside with some boys. The boys high-fived me as I passed by, cheering for Hillary, and the little girl stopped me to ask a question.

“Is Hillary married to that Trump guy?” The girl was clearly confused.

I took a moment to relax and sit down with her to explain who Trump and Hillary were and why it mattered. Her little friends told her to hurry up, but she seemed genuinely interested in talking to me. She said she loved President Obama, and that if she voted she would pick the one who was most like Obama. I told her that choice would be Hillary, and that I thought she would win. I also explained that it would be the first time a girl would become president of the United States. She thought that was cool and declared that girls would be better than boys at being president. I agreed.

Soon it was time to meet my group back at the car. We returned to the Philly headquarters, a little weary and sunburnt, but beaming with pride as we handed in our completed voter registration forms. We had actually accomplished something very important for this campaign and this election, and it felt good.

After my team of canvassers left the Philadelphia headquarters, we all squeezed back into the car and shared our various stories and accomplishments from the day. We were exhausted. We were proud of ourselves. We were proud of each other. All together, our team successfully helped about 50 people to register to vote. Our hard work mattered. Now it was dark outside, and after a long, hard day, I fell asleep in the back of the car as we drove back to New York City.

Alyssa Ritch is a music manager in New York City, currently at LAC Management, Inc. She is also a performer and writer, a certified yoga instructor and a campaign volunteer for the Democratic Party.

In Key Election States, Conservative Groups Build Up A Ground Game

In Key Election States, Conservative Groups Build Up A Ground Game

By Maeve Reston, Los Angeles Times (MCT)

AURORA, Colo. — For much of her 17 years as a financial planner, Molly Vogt never imagined she’d become a political activist. But she was outraged by the financial crisis, launching an economy-focused women’s group called “My Purse Politics” and ultimately taking a full-time job with Americans for Prosperity. She calls it a role she will fill “until I can get government out of my way.”

As a field director in Colorado, Vogt is one of more than 500 paid foot soldiers across the country for the conservative nonprofit group, funded in part by the Koch brothers, that advocates for limited government. For much of this year, she and nearly three dozen other staffers in the state have helped build Americans for Prosperity’s data-driven effort: amassing teams of volunteers who go door to door collecting information on voters and the national and local issues that matter to them — such as the president’s health care law and school choice.

Now, Vogt’s days are centered on turning that data into votes for Republican Rep. Cory Gardner, who is trying to unseat Democratic Sen. Mark Udall in one of November’s tightest and most important races.

In a year when Democrats have focused on issues such as abortion and birth control, Vogt feels a personal responsibility to get women fired up about the government’s role in health care, and the financial and housing markets. “This year was the first time I knocked on a door, because I just got so fed up with what was going on,” she said.

The art of political persuasion can be complex. Television ads — whether uplifting or testily negative — have long been the key vehicle for defining candidates to voters. But the second necessity — getting them to cast their votes — has increasingly rested on meticulously organized, technologically powered, repetitive contact by people like Vogt who identify prospective voters and help close the deal.

In Colorado and other states, the two national parties and their allies are sweeping through the suburbs with the dedication of advancing armies. Americans for Prosperity alone has knocked on 140,000 doors since June.

Such conservative groups are both ascendant and playing catchup to Democratic field operations in key states. Their efforts this year are meant to deliver results in November and create the template for the presidential race in 2016. Americans for Prosperity President Tim Phillips says emphatically that the group is in the field to stay in competitive states including Colorado, Iowa, New Hampshire and Florida — the mightiest of swing states, where the group has 50 full- and part-time staffers.

He notes that for years, the left had the advantage of “a powerful force on the ground that was outside the Democratic Party”: government employee unions, environmental groups and community groups.

“They had an army,” Phillips said. But on the right, “there really was not a permanent infrastructure with professional staff, the ability to mobilize activists on a large scale, with a consistent stream of funding. So at Americans for Prosperity, we’ve spent a decade now working to build just that.”

But they are facing fierce competition, not only from outside Democratic groups. In Colorado, Democrats say their field team is about three times the size it was in 2010 when it helped notch a victory for the state’s other Democratic senator, Michael Bennet, with an average margin of one vote per precinct.

Bennet’s effort that election was so successful in boosting turnout among sporadic Democratic voters that the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee invested $60 million to replicate it across the country this year as the so-called Bannock Street Project, which takes its name from the Denver street where Bennet’s campaign office was located.

With Republicans outmatched in 2012 by the Democrats’ wealth of data and precise turnout operation, the national party this cycle has invested $105 million in improving its ability to track voters’ interests and willingness to go to the polls — or in Colorado’s case, the mailbox, since this year every voter will be able to cast a ballot by mail for the first time.

The GOP efforts in states such as Colorado are bolstered by outside groups, but Americans for Prosperity operates independently and has built its own database of voters. “You want to be able to hold the party that is your erstwhile ally accountable,” Phillips said.

Because it was set up as a “social welfare” nonprofit organization, Americans for Prosperity does not have to disclose its donors, and did not have to detail its spending to the Federal Election Commission until 60 days before the election. But the group financed by the Koch brothers, the billionaire backers of conservative political causes, demonstrated its deep pockets in 2012, when it spent $122 million attempting to defeat President Obama and other Democrats, according to an analysis by the Center for Public Integrity.

In that race, Americans for Prosperity plowed most of its money into advertising. It is still one of the biggest spenders on advertising this year — approaching more than $50 million.

But it has made a far greater investment this year in canvassing and related endeavors than in 2012. Its most recent mailing in Colorado was a report card detailing each voter’s history compared with four neighbors with a perfect voting history — a gentle, data-driven nudge to return their ballots.

Follow-up comes in the form of people like Vogt. IPad in hand, her red curly hair tucked in a ponytail, Vogt and three of her part-time “field associates” — in the group’s corporate lingo — made quick work of the dozens of houses that appeared in that day’s “walk-books,” which are assigned by operatives at the field office and transmitted to the associates’ iPads in real time.

Carefully trained on technology and door etiquette during a several-day seminar in Wisconsin this year, Vogt — in jeans, sneakers, and a blue T-shirt bearing the image of Ronald Reagan and the Americans for Prosperity logo — stands back at a respectful distance from the door.

At one point this year, Vogt was asking voters questions about their beliefs on taxes, health care and education — voter identification scripts that Americans for Prosperity often tried to keep under a minute to maximize the willingness of people to respond. Now, Vogt cheerfully thanks them for voting in 2012 and asks whether they plan to return their ballot. She enters the data on her iPad — lighting up houses where she has gotten a “commitment” in green, and houses where no one was home in red. She will return a few days later with a different script to gauge candidate preference. Once she has determined that a vote has been cast — based on data from the secretary of state — those voters will be cleared from the organization’s list so Vogt and her colleagues can move on to other targets.

She can see which homes her team has hit along the block in real time. There is a brief stop late in the day for chocolate milkshakes — “We get a little punch drunk,” Vogt says with a laugh — but they keep up a brisk pace before heading to the office. Every canvasser gets a progress report at the end of each day, creating friendly competition among the teams across the state.

Less than six miles from where Vogt’s team was canvassing, the Democratic competition — staff and volunteers from Udall’s team and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee — were massing at their campaign headquarters in Aurora.

Launching their own intensive ground effort as ballots began arriving at voters’ homes, as many as 100 Democratic volunteers and staffers packed into the field office, decorated with red, white and blue streamers and colorful hand-painted signs with slogans including “Keep Colorado Blue.”

Bennet served as the warm-up act for Udall as the two senators rallied volunteers before an evening of canvassing. He notes that Udall’s team has recruited four times as many active volunteers — those who have completed a shift in the last three weeks — as his team did in 2010 and that the field staff is nearly three times as large. (A Republican National Committee spokeswoman said it had tripled its field team in Colorado since 2012, but she would not offer details.)

After a cheer, volunteers disperse to the neighborhoods, much as their Republican counterparts had. In near darkness, Dave Lightowler and Michael Briefs work off their illuminated iPads — stopping to review the voter data that they have for each house before approaching the door. At one, they catch a Democrat who registered recently — but admits he’s had little time to figure out who is running. They leave a packet of information and mark the house as one to which they will return.

Half a block down, an independent voter is less receptive. As soon as the volunteers mention the names of Democratic candidates, he slams the door with a curt “forget it.”

Lightowler enters him as a “refusal,” but notes that they still don’t know his wife’s voting plans. He vows to return. “We don’t skip anyone,” he said. “As a canvasser, I want to be sure. This is the playoffs.”

That Democratic relentlessness helped Obama win in Colorado and other swing states. The question is whether Republicans and allied groups like Americans for Prosperity now have the muscle to catch up.

Photo: Molly Vogt, center, works full time as a field director for Americans for Prosperity in Colorado. She heads a team of field associates, including Denise Denny, left, and Pauline Olvera, right, who are going door-to-door talking about AFP’s mission of limited government and persuading voters to vote against Democratic Sen. Mark Udall. (Maeve Reston/Los Angeles Times/MCT)

Memo To Democrats: Change Campaign Strategy Or Keep Losing

Memo To Democrats: Change Campaign Strategy Or Keep Losing

Democrats can win control of the House of Representatives, governorships and many other offices in November if they do just one thing: Stop playing politics the way the Koch brothers and other right-wing billionaires do.

A surefire way to make sure Republicans stay in power is to continue pouring most campaign money into costly television commercials that sway few voters. But the path to victory is simple: Put all that money into registering voters and, especially, getting them to the polls on Election Day. Polls don’t count. Votes do.

For less than the cost of airing a major market television ad just one time, scores of voters can be driven to the polls on Election Day. All it takes are telephones, organizing, and cars with tanks full of gas. It could also be a good one-day jobs program for people long out of work.

You can make this happen. You can exercise power. You can change the direction our nation is heading in. All you need are time, focus, and determination. And you need to tell politicians asking for your donations that you’ll give not one penny for TV ads, but all you can afford in cash and time for getting out the vote.

Of course you could just keep donating to politicians who lavish money on campaign professionals, who prosper buying television airtime even when their candidate-clients fail to win despite poll after poll showing that Republicans are out of touch with what Americans want.

When 73 percent of Republicans support increasing Social Security benefits even as party leaders work to cut them, it shows that our Election Day results are out of alignment with popular attitudes.

So does this fact: Republicans control the House even though, in 2012, Americans who cast ballots favored Democratic House candidates by 60,252,696 votes to 58,541,130.

The reason the minority party has control is partly gerrymandering: The creation of districts, often with bizarre geographical boundaries, that corral Democrats and those likely to vote for Democrats (students, union members, minorities, etc.) into highly concentrated blue districts.

On the other hand, most people simply do not vote. In many off-year congressional elections, turning out a few thousand unexpected voters could change the outcome.

To get an idea of how much failing to vote hurts, consider Ferguson, the Missouri town where a white city council and nearly all-white police department abuse black citizens, just 2 percent of whom voted in the last municipal election (compared to 12 percent of whites). Because the city is two-thirds black, if Ferguson blacks voted in the high single digits, and assuming white voting is unchanged, the disenfranchised could win the next municipal election.

Republicans could, of course, also put more money into turning out the vote if Democrats change their strategy. But since poll after poll shows that strong majorities favor progressive policies, including closing corporate tax loopholes and raising tax rates on the super-rich, this is a game they cannot win.

So long as elections are dominated by money, the billionaires enjoy the advantage. The right simply enjoys far more capacity than progressives to spend on elections.

And the oligarchs benefit far more than unions or other organizations of the common people from the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision equating political dollars with political speech.

Griping about what an awful decision that was will not win elections. And like the Supreme Court’s racist Dred Scott and Plessy decisions, Citizens United is going to be with us for a long time. Better to work around that decision than to grouse.

It is also crucial to understand that many of the oligarchs see government in different terms from everyone else. They see government policy as a potential source of profits, or hobbling competition, and in general as an institution central to their welfare.

Many of those who grow rich off government policies think of campaign spending not as donations, but as risky investments, like venture capital.

In the 2012 elections, congressional campaigns spent almost $3.7 billion, far more than the $2.6 billion spent on the presidential contest. Take a look at the profits of companies enriched by anti-consumer federal policies – in banking, health insurance, railroads, or telecommunications, to name a few – and those seemingly huge figures turn out to be pocket change.

When candidates whom the oligarchs support are elected, they often – though not always — can be counted on to promote subtle but lucrative changes in laws and regulations. These include slashing audits of corporate tax returns, cutting safety inspections at job sites, and denying money or political support for prosecutions, as we have seen with the free pass given to Wall Street for fraudulently issuing mortgages and then bundling them into toxic securities to be sold to public pension funds and other gullible buyers.

The strategic big campaign donors to both parties know that while each of these investments are risky, the overall payoff from campaign donations will earn far more money than they can earn in the marketplace, as I have shown in my trilogy on the American economy, Perfectly Legal, Free Lunch and The Fine Print.

The income tax system, for example, has become a huge profit center for multinational companies, as detailed in my Sept. 12 cover story for Newsweek. The pipeline industry rakes in billions from a tax it is exempt from paying, yet under a George W. Bush-era regulation, customers are forced to pay to the industry. Nearly 3,000 big companies get to secretly keep some of the income taxes withheld from employee paychecks. Congress and state-level politicians help cable and telephone monopolists reduce competition and jack up prices. And politicians like Chris Christie, the Republican New Jersey governor who hopes to become president, enrich Wall Street by steering overpriced contracts to manage pension money to firms run by their donors.

WASTED MONEY

Lots of TV ads are wasted money. As one chapter in a 2011 book on campaign advertising by Professors Travis N. Ridout of Washington State University and Michael M. Franz of Bowdoin College explains:

Your ad will be seen by your base voters, undecided voters, voters of the other party, and lots of non-voters. What you say on television, then, often can be wasted on viewers who will never vote for you, or never vote at all. In sum, television remains more of a shotgun tactic than a rifle shot.

Ridout’s and Franz’s book looks at politics as it is and concludes that television ads can be important.  But the path to electoral victory, as to profits for those taking on any entrenched business, is doing things differently.

Democrats should take some lessons here from business.

Conrad Hilton and his team came up with the idea of putting hotels at airports in 1959, and later inside the terminals. Mostly because no one had thought of it before, those who followed the traditional model of building business hotels downtown considered the idea crazy. Hilton made a fortune, in part because expense-account guests gladly pay premium rates for rooms they can walk to, avoiding the hassles of taxis, traffic and even more time lost to travel, as well as permitting more sleep before an early-morning flight home.

The Kochs grow rich refining their consumer products to please buyers, from the absorbency of their Brawny paper towels to the varieties of Dixie cups. Make no mistake; the Kochs are serious people who manage their businesses well.

The way to win, then, is to change the game. Instead of playing catchup in the money game, turn politics this fall into a get-out-the-vote game.

The strategy is for districts where the vote is not so lopsided that a Democrat could never win. If you live in one those, find a district nearby that could be changed with an unexpectedly large turnout. Call friends and start going door to door to register voters. Call people the day before polling starts to urge them to vote – not with those annoying robocalls, but real human contact. And take Election Day off so you and others can drive people to the polls.

Or stay home and watch football and Dancing with the Stars on TV.

Photo: Neighborhood Centers Inc. via Flickr

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Endorse This: James Clyburn’s Risqué Plan To Get Out The Vote

Endorse This: James Clyburn’s Risqué Plan To Get Out The Vote

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Rep. James Clyburn (D-SC) has a suggestion for getting young people to the polls this November — but it doesn’t mean what the congressman thinks it does.

Click above to see Clyburn propose a get-out-the-vote plan that only Anthony Weiner could love — then share this video!

Video via Buzz Sourse/YouTube.

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