Sanders to Spend More Than $30 Million on Advertising in Early States
Nov. 7, 2019
WASHINGTON Bernie Sanderss campaign plans to spend more than $30 million on TV advertising alone in the first four presidential nominating states and California, according to several people familiar with the strategy, a financial show of force that also suggests he needs to reach outside the traditional sphere of Democratic primary voters and caucusgoers for support.
Mr. Sanders, the senator from Vermont, has been on the air in Iowa since early October, when his campaign spent $1.3 million on television advertising, and has bought $1 million of TV time in New Hampshire beginning Thursday.
He brings regular people into the process who are not currently participating, said Jeff Weaver, a Sanders adviser, who is leading the TV-centric strategy. You need to be reaching people in a nonpolitical space. To find people who are not going to caucus, you have to be in spaces where they are, and thats on television.
The campaign is also betting on a tactic that it used in 2016, known as distributed organizing, that relies heavily on a vast web of volunteers. The hope is that they will motivate other supporters, especially unlikely or first-time voters.
Claire Sandberg, the Sanders campaigns national organizing director, said in an interview last month that her aim was to reach all of the people who have given up on the political process and talking to them about what matters to them and then encouraging them to come out and vote.
Were able to do that because we can reach a scale of voter contact that no other campaign can, she added.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/07/us/politics/bernie-sanders-television-ads.html