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Showing Original Post only (View all)'If we do this right...': The new Dem organizing strategy catching fire ahead of the midterms [View all]
PoliticoA group of Democratic strategists is trying to spread a novel organizing tactic in this years election. Technically, its called paid relational organizing, but it boils down to this: paying people to talk to their friends about politics.
Democrats think it helped them win the Senate in 2020 and are hoping the get-out-the-vote strategy will help limit the pain of a brutal 2022 election environment.
Conversations with friends, family members or neighbors are more likely to earn a voters support than chats with a stranger at their front door, which is the traditional way campaigns have run paid canvassing programs in the past. And an important test case for deploying the strategy at scale came out of the Georgia Senate runoffs in 2021 when now-Sen. Jon Ossoffs (D-Ga.) campaign, flush with nearly unlimited cash but only two months to spend it, used a paid and volunteer relational program to get people talking to acquaintances instead of strangers about the election.
In particular, the Ossoff team hired 2,800 Georgians, specifically targeting those with little or no voting history themselves to do this outreach to their own networks. The campaign was making a bet that many of the friends and family of their highly political volunteers were already engaged in the runoff election, but that this group could expand the electorate with relational outreach into their networks which were likely to include more irregular voters or non-voters like them. The campaign folded this data into their vast field program, tracking conversations and whether those contacted had voted. They could even notify organizers, based on their own network, which voters were tagged as only reachable by you.
Democrats think it helped them win the Senate in 2020 and are hoping the get-out-the-vote strategy will help limit the pain of a brutal 2022 election environment.
Conversations with friends, family members or neighbors are more likely to earn a voters support than chats with a stranger at their front door, which is the traditional way campaigns have run paid canvassing programs in the past. And an important test case for deploying the strategy at scale came out of the Georgia Senate runoffs in 2021 when now-Sen. Jon Ossoffs (D-Ga.) campaign, flush with nearly unlimited cash but only two months to spend it, used a paid and volunteer relational program to get people talking to acquaintances instead of strangers about the election.
In particular, the Ossoff team hired 2,800 Georgians, specifically targeting those with little or no voting history themselves to do this outreach to their own networks. The campaign was making a bet that many of the friends and family of their highly political volunteers were already engaged in the runoff election, but that this group could expand the electorate with relational outreach into their networks which were likely to include more irregular voters or non-voters like them. The campaign folded this data into their vast field program, tracking conversations and whether those contacted had voted. They could even notify organizers, based on their own network, which voters were tagged as only reachable by you.
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'If we do this right...': The new Dem organizing strategy catching fire ahead of the midterms [View all]
brooklynite
Apr 2022
OP
"Paying people to talk about voting" strikes me as disturbingly close to buying votes.
Hellbound Hellhound
Apr 2022
#1
An ad is different than paying an individual directly to convince their families to vote.
Hellbound Hellhound
Apr 2022
#3
Not "Afraid" of anything other than regressing into an unconstitutional quagmire.
Hellbound Hellhound
Apr 2022
#13
Party people ...campaign workers are already paid to talk to voters...nothing wrong with it.
Demsrule86
Apr 2022
#21
You only talk to a list of Democrats or Democratic friendly voters...I assume you would support
Demsrule86
Apr 2022
#22
A political party is paying individual citizens, not professionals in their organization, for votes.
Hellbound Hellhound
Apr 2022
#7
I think it is fine. People who work on well funded campaigns are already paid. I don't have any
Demsrule86
Apr 2022
#20
Ads don't work...how many of us even have cable TV anymore? I would make sure that we hire some
Demsrule86
Apr 2022
#17
They will say what they say no matter what we do...so a big who cares. We can't let them dictate to
Demsrule86
Apr 2022
#18
I take you have never worked the GOTV...the lists are of Democratic voters...some who voted in the
Demsrule86
Apr 2022
#24
Outreach marketing. Perfectly legal, and quite an innovation to tap into people inactive politically
bucolic_frolic
Apr 2022
#9
And it will be used in Fetterman's campaign to help get out the vote now doubt in the General...
Demsrule86
Apr 2022
#16
Why not? Everything that works is OK by me. We need to win more elections...the sooner the better.
Demsrule86
Apr 2022
#15
Makes more sense than going up to a magat's door. Interesting though, targeting the
GoodRaisin
Apr 2022
#27