Volunteers are back

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Sense and Sensibility

Sense and Sensibility
When people are talking to people sensibility prevails
By Mark Sump

This week’s election results in Oregon tell a story that the media has missed, but it’s not the first time. The fact that Oregon voters turned out in huge numbers to pass two “tax hike” propositions belies the narrative among Republicans and swallowed hook-line-and-sinker by the media. This was a campaign that engaged thousands of supporters across the state who in turn engaged hundreds of thousands of voters by explaining the facts of Measures 66 and 67. Yes for Oregon adopted the new paradigm in effective campaigns; that volunteers are back and they’re winning campaigns

The media is of course singularly focused on recent Democratic Party failures in Virginia, New Jersey and, of course, Massachusetts. They were colossal failures, and each of them was a reflection of the old paradigm in political campaigns. It is no longer true that the successful campaign is the one that has the most and best television advertisements. It is no longer true that campaigns can be won without engaging the public.

Coakley is the definition of this old paradigm. The fact that she was up by 30 points after her primary is not the relevant issue. The fact that she did not see the need to run a campaign after the primary is relevant. The fact that she did not see the need to engage the public and rally her supporters is relevant. Relying on a blitz of paid media at the end of the campaign no longer wins campaigns for Democrats even in the most liberal of states. Coakley is proof of that.

The new paradigm in winning elections is that public opinion is important, but paid media no longer carries the sway to change public opinion it once did. The new paradigm is that you have to earn public opinion through direct interaction with the public.

While the media is focused on in a few high profile campaigns, there is a quiet undercurrent that has so far gone unnoticed. The latest is Oregon, but just last month, the city of Houston…not known for its liberalism…elected Annise Parker the first big city mayor who happens to be a lesbian. A month before that, the state of Washington rejected proposition 71 ensuring the most sweeping gay rights legislation ever up for a public vote in the nation’s history.

Each of these campaigns had two things in common. Each of them embraced this paradigm shift toward engaging an army of volunteers, and each of them won.

This year, the smart campaigns will begin building and training their army of volunteers months in advance so that on Election Day they are not left to the whims of a media who is more interested in the “gotcha” than the truth.