As if The Bat never happened 29 June, 2007
Posted by Zack in 2008, Dean Bat, FEC Deadlines, Howard Dean, Joe Trippi, Online Fundraising.8 comments
On this day in the parallel universe of the 2003-2004 cycle, we were all watching history being made. The politics of money in presidential primaries was being turned on its head forever by a daring gamble by Joe Trippi. Or so we thought at the time. None of the 2008 campaigns on either side have attempted to repeat the Dean 2003 miracle. As a result, no second tier candidate will break into the first tier, and Big Money will dominate just as it did in the first quarter of this year.
As we entered these last 48 hours before the June 2003 FEC filing deadline, it had become clear that Trippi’s Big Gamble was, unbelievably, beginning to work. Days earlier, he had stepped outside of the fundraising expectations management game and started up a new game all his own.
Just days before the FEC deadline, Trippi sent an email to supporters in which he came right out and admitted Dean had not raised enough money in the 2nd quarter to be taken seriously any longer (he was only just barely taken seriously as it stood). Dean would, essentially, be out of the running when the results came out.
So Trippi asked Dean supporters to make the impossible possible: to turn the dark horse, no-chance, insurgent candidate into the winner of the Money Primary–to show for the fist time ever that grassroots donors could over power the lobbyists, the lawyers and the CEOs. Specifically, he told them (in a series of emails that kept pushing the goal higher and higher) that if they donated an additional several million dollars in the last days of the quarter, that Dean would blow past the expected fundraising totals of John Kerry and John Edwards, the two leading establishment candidates. He told Dean supporters that this was a fool proof way to use the establishment’s own stupid rules against it. The media would have to anoint Dean the new frontrunner if he beat the current frontrunners at their own money game.
Many inside the campaign thought Trippi’s gamble was crazy. They didn’t believe supporters would or could donate what was needed. The gamble would dramatically raise expectations, precisely when the campaign should be doing everything it could to lower them.
Because, and only because, Trippi was the campaign manager, and not an “Internet guy,” he had the power to pull the trigger and go ahead with his gamble.
The Internet team created a special graphic progress meter for the gamble: a baseball player holding an inflated bat. (“Hit one out of the park for Dean!”) The bat quickly became a rallying point for Dean supporters. Posted and reposted on the campaign blog and other blogs, and always available and (mostly) up-to-date on the campaign’s contribution page, the bat was the physical symbol of how much supporters had accomplished and how far they had to go. The bat induced many supporters to give over and over again.
Two days before the deadline–which is right where we are today–it was clear that the gamble was working. Dean had caught up to where Kerry and Edwards were rumored to be, around five million dollars for the quarter.
From this point on, every donation became an offensive, rather than a defensive move. The grassroots simply couldn’t believe that it was winning at the Big Money game it had always loathed. The effort gained new momentum as thousands who had just given gave again.
Many staff at all the other Democratic campaigns were glued to their screens on that Sunday and Monday, the last two days of the quarter. They couldn’t control themselves. Many Kerry and Edwards staff especially were overcome with dismay. Laws of politics which seemed as predictable as the laws of physics had been suspended–it was like someone shut off gravity. Others couldn’t help but be swept up in the excitement. Carol Moseley Braun’s finance director couldn’t stop herself from contributing to Dean herself–and was fired a couple weeks later when the FEC reports came out. (She quickly found a job at Dean.)
Why haven’t any lagging candidates–especially John Edwards or John McCain–dramatically called upon their bases to catapult them forward this quarter? And why have all the candidates so prioritized high dollar fundraising over small dollar fundraising? (For example, the ratio of grassroots fundraising to high-dollar event fundraising totals last quarter was roughly the inverse of Dean’s Q2 2003 ratio.)
Sure, everyone’s sending out urgent fundraising emails asking for support at this “critical deadline.” And there are progress meters. But no one has staked their campaign on this moment–even candidates who could conceivably be knocked almost out of the race by it.
The reason is this: Dean’s June 2003 miracle was not accomplished by an email–or by any clever web strategy. It was accomplished by a special and sincere promise to its supporter base: “We’re going to stand for what’s right–and we’re relying completely on you to give us the strength to succeed.”
It was something similar to John McCain’s 2000 campaign, which was the first big show of grassroots online fundraising power. In both McCain 2000 and Dean 2004, you could see the sincerity and the passion in the candidate himself. In both cases, only half the credit goes to the candidate. The other half goes to campaign managers and media consultants who were not afraid of real passion and real honesty.
In this race, I think we’ve got some candidates who’ve got incredibly exciting stuff going on inside their heads. With the right support, I think they’d be ready to have an amazing relationship with their supporter bases, and would love to be running a Dean 2004 or McCain 2000 style of campaign (at least in terms of passion and sincerity).
So it turns out–at least for now– that Trippi 2003 was a fluke, a lesson that went unlearned. (Sure Trippi’s at Edwards now, but not in charge.) The grassroots will continue to use the Internet and other new technology to assert its influence on the 2008 cycle. The local communities and national networks that were forged in the 2004 cycle have continued to grow and thrive. Now, on both sides, they’re enthusiastically gearing up for this new fight. But so far, all of the major candidates and campaign managers continue to relate to this base only through gimmicks and abstract references to “the grassroots nature of my campaign.”
More on the evangelical shift 27 June, 2007
Posted by Zack in prophetic politics, Red Letter Christians, Revolutionary Evangelicals, What are the Christians up to?.add a comment
From “‘Red-letter Christians’ a growing political force”, by Hannah Elliott today. It’s part three of a five-part series on religion and politics, “Render to Caesar,” at Associated Baptist Press (“the first and only independent news service created by and for Baptists”).
“It’s simmering…There are a lot of young people under the surface doing amazing things. Something is going on here. There is a seismic shift. There’s something happening that is going on well beyond the institutional church that we see on TV.”
Here are the first three & parts.
Thanks to Faith in Public Life for the link.
TB’s last words 27 June, 2007
Posted by Zack in Labour, Tony Blair.1 comment so far
Mr. Speaker, if I may just finish with two brief remarksâ€â€first to the House. I have never pretended to be a great House of Commons man, but I pay the House the greatest compliment I can by saying that, from first to last, I never stopped fearing it. The tingling apprehension that I felt at three minutes to 12 today I felt as much 10 years ago, and every bit as acute. It is in that fear that the respect is contained.
The second thing that I would like to say is about politics and to all my colleagues from different political parties. Some may belittle politics but we who are engaged in it know that it is where people stand tall. Although I know that it has many harsh contentions, it is still the arena that sets the heart beating a little faster. If it is, on occasions, the place of low skulduggery, it is more often the place for the pursuit of noble causes. I wish everyone, friend or foe, well. That is that. The end.
wikipedia moment 26 June, 2007
Posted by Zack in Wavy Gravy, Wikipedia, wikipedia moments.add a comment
just had one. a song called Wavy Gravy came on Pandora. know something about Wavy Gravy, but got curious. search box. click. voilà!
His moniker…was given to him by B.B. King at the Texas International Pop Festival while he lay onstage incapacitated by a high dosage of LSD. King asked if he was all right, to which the soon-to-be-renamed Romney replied, “I’ve melted into a wavy pool of gravy.” King reassured him, “That’s okay, you just stay there and be wavy gravy on the floor while I sing my songs!” Romney considered this a mystical event and permanently assumed Wavy Gravy as his legal name.
just so great.
MyClass 26 June, 2007
Posted by Zack in Class, danah boyd, Facebook, MySpace, Uncategorized.add a comment
Danah Boyd has a great post on class in America as expressed in the apparent migration of middle class young people away from MySpace to FaceBook.
Hegemonic American teens (i.e. middle/upper class, college bound teens from upwards mobile or well off families) are all on or switching to Facebook. Marginalized teens, teens from poorer or less educated backgrounds, subculturally-identified teens, and other non-hegemonic teens continue to be drawn to MySpace. A class division has emerged and it is playing out in the aesthetics, the kinds of advertising, and the policy decisions being made.
Others have noticed this. But what’s really wonderful about Danah’s post is her complete honesty as an academic about the weakness of available categories inside or outside of the academic world for talking about class.
I want to take a moment to make a meta point here. I have been traipsing through the country talking to teens and I’ve been seeing this transition for the past 6-9 months but I’m having a hard time putting into words. Americans aren’t so good at talking about class and I’m definitely feeling that discomfort. It’s sticky, it’s uncomfortable, and to top it off, we don’t have the language for marking class in a meaningful way. So this piece is intentionally descriptive, but in being so, it’s also hugely problematic. I don’t have the language to get at what I want to say, but I decided it needed to be said anyhow. I wish I could just put numbers in front of it all and be done with it, but instead, I’m going to face the stickiness and see if I can get my thoughts across. Hopefully it works.
Got Organizers? (We do.) 25 June, 2007
Posted by Zack in 2008, Jobs, NOI, Online organizing, Organizing.add a comment
If you’re hiring for a campaign, or any campaigning organization, please check out the incoming class of the New Organizing Institute’s 2nd annual week-long intensive campaign training. Graduates from this training last year went on to serve as:
- Internet directors with House, Senate and Gubernatorial races
- Campaign managers for state assembly races
- Field organizers
- Communications/press staff
- Internet staff/ online organizers
Contact us at info@neworganizing.com if you would like more info. You can arrange to come to the training and our career fair on Sunday, July 8th, to meet the trainees in person. But you can read about them right now on our website too.
This class of 60 trainees was selected out of hundreds of applicants for their talent, experience and also for their immediate intention to go work on political campaigns in the 2008 cycle. Most of the trainees are recent graduates from college, many just off their first campaign, with a few others looking for a career switch. Most are people who have already been using technology and the Internet to change the way politics are done, either in campus politics or on an actual campaign or two.
The mission of the New Organizing Institute (NOI) is to improve the way in which technology and the Internet are used in politics as well as the non-profit sphere. Our trainings are usually targeted specifically for one of those sectors at a time, with this one targeting 2008 (and 2007!) campaigns and other campaigning political entities.
The goal of our campaign trainings is to push more people into the staffing pipeline who understand what the Internet can do for politics. We take people who already get it, and try to give them an intensive overview of what’s already been tried, what’s failed, what’s succeeded. We add to that some general principles for making their own future trial and error more efficient. And we try to give these trainees a solid foundation in “traditional” campaign skill sets such as communications, fundraising and field organizing, though we treat each topic with an updated approach that takes into account how technology and the Internet have changed the field.
These 60 future rising stars are going to get snapped up quickly. Contact us now at info@neworganizing.com if you’ve got a campaign position you’re trying to fill.
How about a real guild for World of Warcraft in-game workers? 21 June, 2007
Posted by Zack in labor, The Intarweb, World of Warcraft.6 comments
Twelve hours a day, seven days a week, twenty five cents an hour. Sure, you get free housing—but it’s just a space on dirty floor upstairs over the sweatshop. Those are the working conditions, described by the NYTimes’ Julien Debbell today, of Chinese “Gold Farmers,” workers who play the popular video game World of War Craft for a living.
If you haven’t heard about this phenomenon, here’s what’s going on: There are video games where players compete against each other (and team up to cooperate with each other) online. Some of these games have millions of players–with hundreds of thousands frequently playing simultaneously. The games place you in a virtual, graphic world—though its still arguable that
the world is more enhanced by the players imaginations than their computers’ graphics cards. In the game, there are things of value that players want—fighting equipment, magic powers, spells and pretty much anything else you can think of. So it wasn’t long before players started buying and selling these things for real, not virtual, money. And it wasn’t long after that sweatshops started popping up all over the world to make a business out of it.
World of Warcraft is the most popular of these “Massively multiplayer online role-playing games,” with something like seven million players.
In World of Warcraft, players organize themselves into “guilds” so that they can take on bigger challenges than they would be able to alone. Some guilds are a group of real life friends, and some are a mix of strangers from all over the world who only interact in the game. In fact, most of the fun in these games is the team work and socializing. Here’s a famous video (famous in the gaming world) of some game action by a guild (a whole genre, called machinima, of these kinds of videos has arisen from the gaming world).
So. Here’s my idea. Would it be possible to form a large guild of players in the game who are actually exploited workers in real life, set minimum wages and working conditions, and then—just like in the days of ancient real-life guilds—enforce membership and adherence to standards by any means necessary (in the game only!).
In other words, the members of this guild (perhaps financed by real-world trade unions) could rove around the World of Warcraft and disrupt the work of exploited players by, say, killing them. Eventually the sweatshop owners would have to factor in the standards to the cost of doing business. But it would only work if you could enforce the standards near universally.
Can any gamers tell me if this scheme might be possible? With bosses looking over their shoulders, exploited players wouldn’t be able to self-identify as sweatshop workers. But are the identities of sweatshop guilds discoverable within the game? If so, then the workers’ guild could take anonymous tips from exploited workers when they’re away from the sweatshop, or from former workers.
Wow 20 June, 2007
Posted by Zack in Off the Bus, Uncategorized.add a comment
Sooo many people are signing up for Off the Bus. AND emailing in too. People are insanely enthusiastic about this. It’s being received like a glass of ice water in Hell for folks who are sick of the mainstream media ’08 coverage.
Get on Off the Bus 19 June, 2007
Posted by Zack in 2008, Off the Bus.1 comment so far
I’m signing on with Off the Bus—the upcoming citizen journalism site co-published by Arianna Huffington and Jay Rosen. I’ll be a roving corespondent for HuffPo and Off the Bus on the 2008 race, and will help out with recruiting and organizing this army of citizen journalists.
I’m really looking forward to this. In 2000, I watched the presidential race as a…well…Internet crank (that’s what they called netroots/blogger types before the rise of the blogs) publishing a parody site and making various other kinds of trouble. In 2004, oddly enough, I got to experience the race from the inside. This time, I’ll be observing as a journalist.
Read more here from Arianna, Jay and myself.
Amanda Michel will be directing this project. At Dean and Kerry and more recently at Assignment Zero, she has been one of the primary pioneers of the kind of online organizing that invites volunteers to do more than click on a link or write a letter. She’s got a knack for providing vols with inspiration and organization without getting in their way or getting bogged down in “serialism” (i.e. feeling it’s necessary to call each volunteer every day for them to be able to succeed). The result is a whole lot of people doing an awful lot.
I’m really looking forward to working with her again. I worked with her on Kerry, where I was her manager. Now she’ll be managing me. Believe me, it’s much, much better that way!
So, starting in a month or two, I’ll be out on the road almost all the time. No, not chasing the candidates, but rather chasing the revolution that’s changing the way politics are done. Please join me by participating in the project yourself as a citizen journalist by signing up at OffTheBus.net.
Preacher/Pastor/Podcaster/Blogger 16 June, 2007
Posted by Zack in Eric Stillman, Revolutionary Evangelicals, What are the Christians up to?.1 comment so far
A new dimension is creeping into the role of religious leadership in America: blogging.
For hundreds of years, this country has been packed at any given time with thousands upon thousands of local religious leaders—mostly Christian preacher/pastors. These leaders play a vital role in serving their communities in many ways. As preachers they provide spiritual, moral and intellectual guidance to close to half of America. As pastors, they minister directly to millions of church members in need. Through history, these leaders played a central role in the American Revolution, Abolition, the Peace Movement and the Civil Rights Movement.
In other words, this is a very important sector of our population to keep an eye on. But until recently, it was impossible to get a birds eye view of what these folks were up to short of launching an expensive research program.
Now that’s all changed. Just go to iTunes and search the podcast directory for sermons. Thousands of churches, synagogues, mosques and other religious congregations are posting their weekly teachings online for free. They’re posting these for their own members to re-listen or to catch if they couldn’t make it to services. This creates an amazing opportunity to be able to listen in on entire national communities of worshipers.
But podcasting sermons doesn’t require a change in the way religious leaders lead. They’re just recording the sermons they’re already giving.
Blogging, on the other hand, requires a whole new kind of voice. And link-ability makes blogging a lot more risky for pastors. I can link to a podcast where something controversial was said, but you’re not going to go listen to it, are you? But if I link to something controversial on a pastor’s blog, not only can you go read it in seconds, but you can link to it yourself from your own blog.
Therefore, only a relative handful of pastors have taken up blogging. But keep an eye on the rise of the preacher/pastor/podcaster/blogger. Eric Stillman is one I’d highly recommend reading. There are a few nationally famous preacher-bloggers. But Stillman is the pastor at a small evangelical church in Connecticut. Check out the way he’s wrestling openly with really tough theological and political issues right out in the open. If you listen to his recent sermons, you’ll see that his blogging is an extension of what he’s talking about at church. The blog seems to give him a chance to go deeper and sometimes carry on a conversation with church members in the comments.
Finally, it may be that church blogs (and podcasts) will help exciting churches grow. I found Eric Stillman’s blog when my wife and I thought we were moving back to Connecticut and were looking for a church. In the course of looking, we came across many other blogs (especially a lot of young people’s on MySpace) where relocated friends were helping each other with their own church searches. The only thing these seekers had to go on was church blogs and audio sermons.