This document provides guidance on voter targeting for political campaigns. It discusses identifying three types of voters - supporters, opponents, and undecideds - and determining which to target based on the percentages of each. The primary targets are undecided voters who are most persuadable and soft supporters of the opposing candidate. Various methods are described for identifying supporters through phone calls, door-to-door canvassing, and predictive modeling using demographics and past voting behavior. The goal is to secure one's base, target persuadable voters for persuasion efforts, and target marginal supporters for get-out-the-vote activities to reach the threshold for victory.
Running for elected office is one of the best ways you can give back to their community. Whether you want to run for city council, county representative or school board, every political candidate must begin their campaign by making the decision to actually run. https://www.onlinecandidate.com/articles/run-local-office
Reflect on voter participation, campaign financing, and the legitimafelipaser7p
Reflect on voter participation, campaign financing, and the legitimacy of elections. Also discuss whether financing elections solely with tax dollars and banning contributions from special interest groups and individuals would make elections more representative of the will of the American people. Discuss whether “voter ID laws” have the effect of disenfranchising eligible voters or of protecting the sanctity of elections from fraud.
In responding to your classmates, discuss how the low level of voter turnout in American elections can make those elections less legitimate than they would be with higher turnout. Explain and support your position.
For your response posts (2), you must do the following:
Reply to at least two different classmates outside of your own initial post thread.
In Module One, complete the two response posts by Sunday at 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time.
In Modules Two through Eight, complete the two response posts by Sunday at 11:59 p.m. of your local time zone.
Demonstrate more depth and thought than simply stating that “I agree” or “You are wrong.”
Guidance is provided for you in each discussion prompt.
classmates Post #1:
In this discussion, many questions are being raised about elections in general. Let’s look at these question one at a time:
Voter Participation: The Soomo web text covered that issue very well. It stated that a few criteria exist for the participation of voter, and they are usually categorized under a few categories. Voter Turnout is identified as more than approximately 74 % are college graduates, most who also vote to have annual incomes above 50 k per year also most who vote are older American over the age of 35 years or older. A lot of the voting is along party line as opposed to the quality of the candidate. But my feeling is that voters are moving toward voting for the candidate as opposed to the party. (Evans, J., & Michaud, K)
Campaign Financing: The content is always at the forefront of the news every election cycle. Monies are being thrown at the candidates and many illegal items come out of the campaigns. For example; Lavish Trips, extra activities not associated with the campaign (diner, escorts etc…) Dark money donor is and always have been an issue these monies are not recorded, this is almost like play money for the campaigns to do what they want, with whoever they want. The SuperPAC monies are for the candidate to be influenced in a way that the average person never knows about. The candidate doesn’t speak of the donation while on the speech tours but the widely influence the route a candidate take after he is elected. Even in small-town elections the monies from developers, business influences are given being the seen for agendas that no one sees. (Evans, J., & Michaud, K)
The legitimacy of Elections and the Voter ID issue goes hand in hand with each other. Many believe that voter fraud and the id or lack thereof is the biggest is ...
Campaign assignmentAfter 11 years as a police officer and 4 as a.docxhacksoni
Campaign assignment
After 11 years as a police officer and 4 as a county constable, Steve Radack was elected to represent Precinct 3 on Harris County Commissioners' Court in 1988, and has served there ever since. On the last day for candidates to file in December, 2019, Commissioner Radack announced he would not seek reelection, setting off a scramble of candidates for one of the most powerful positions in government.
The voters of Precinct 3 have leaned Republican over the past 30 years or so, but growth in the area's minority population combined with the unpopularity of President Donald Trump among suburban and exurban voters have made this a competitive seat in a general election. Republican Donald Trump carried this area in 2016, despite losing Harris County, but Democrat Beto O'Rourke carried it in the 2018 senate race.
Before even getting to the general election, though, candidates have to compete in party primary elections to become their party's nominee.
For this assignment. You are now the virtual campaign manager for a candidate for Harris County Commissioner, Precinct 3. If your client is a Republican, they're trying to win the Republican Primary. If your client is a Democrat, they're trying to win the Democratic Primary. Don't worry about the November election yet. If you were in charge, what would you do to help your client get elected to this office?
Choose one of the candidates and design a campaign to win the primary election.
Write this assignment as a 2 - 5 page
memorandum (memo)
(with cited sources) from you, the campaign manager, to your candidate. Outline the race for them, how much money you think they need to raise, how you will raise it for them, what you propose to spend it on, what issues they should talk about, how you want to deliver their message, etc.
Some things to keep in mind:
Remember, party primaries are only for that party's voters. If your candidate's a Republican, you're only campaigning to Republican voters. If your candidate's a Democrat, you're only campaigning to Democratic voters.
Precinct 3 is huge - geographically and demographically. At 1.2 million, it has more people than Montana.
Nearly half the population is not in the city limits of any city, meaning county government is the only source of many government services like law enforcement, parks, libraries and code enforcement.
If nobody in your primary race gets a majority (50% plus one) of the vote, the top two finishers will go to a runoff election on May 26. Will any voters still be paying attention on May 26?
Not everybody who lives in Precinct 3 will vote in this election. Some are under 18 years old, or they're not U.S. citizens. Some simply won't register or show up. Some voters just don't vote in party primaries. How do you target people who are going to vote in this election?
What sort of people live in your candidate's district. What motivates them?
What is your candidate's background and experience? What will be his or.
The wasted votes problem in MMP - and how to fix itMike Osborne
The current handling of wasted votes in MMP is undemocratic; it needs to change.
Voters who vote for parties that don't meet the threshold effectively get their votes allocated to parties that do meet the threshold.
Allow voters to select parties by preference so that they can explicitly direct where their votes go should they vote for a party that doesn't meet the threshold.
Get Out the Vote (GOTV) is a topic can easily fill hundreds of pages. We’ve boiled it down to the most important components:
- Proven GOTV scripts for success
- Latest GOTV developments
- What doesn't work
- What works
1. Voter Targeting 401
Joe Fuld- National Committee for an Effective Congress.
(These are notes for advanced campaigning)
Targeting answers 3 questions: Who is persuadable? Who supports your candidate? Who
will vote on election day?
Three kinds of voters. Supporters. Opponents. Undecideds.
Mathematics of Victory- must (get 50% + 1)
1. Decide what % will give you victory.
2. Start counting with the easiest voters first. (your supporters)
3. If supporters are less than 51%, then go to the next easiest voters (the undecideds).
4. If still not at 51%, you must target soft supporters of your opponent.
The primary target is the least persuadable voter that you will absolutely need.
If you are at 55%, opponent at 35% and undecided is 10% then turn out your base to win.
If you are 30%, opponent is 55% and undecided is 15%, then talk to undecideds. Also talk
to your opponent's softest supporters.
If you are at 35%, opponent also at 35% and undecideds are 30%, then you must target the
undecideds.
Use a mix of polling data, instincts and message to find a persuasion target. Identify
supporters for GOTV effort in November. Turn out your supporters on Election day thru
Get Out the Vote activities.
The only way to ID your supporters is to call them, canvas door to door, or to use
prediction techniques. Try to add and omit voters with targeting. Find out saints and
sinners. Omit your opponent's supporters from your universe. Think of the voter universe
as a pie chart. Eliminate some slices and concentrate on others.
Three types of voters. Always vote. Sometimes votes. Never votes.
Figure out who they are. Which support D, R, L?
Ex-Democratic candidate in N.C. He talks to democrats who sometimes, always vote. He
also talks to independents. He tries to peel off pro-choice GOP women that always vote.
2. Supporter targeting.
1. Phone match may only be 50% of supporters. Also some people you can't reach by
phone.
2. Door to door is effective, but it takes much time and money.
3. Predict by using polling data and past election data. You can predict which voters are
with you. You can find target demographics to talk to.
Demographic targeting uses info from polls. Age, sex, religion, income, etc. You draw
inferences.
Geographic targetings looks at where voters live. Is someone in your precinct likely to be a
persuadable voter? Some districts have more persuadable voters than others. Go to precinct
level data. Look at averages, not individuals. Your state's voter file contains both
demographic and geographic information.
Focus resources on persuadable voters who are less likely to turn out on election day. If
someone is a super democrat who votes in every election, including primaries, then you
don't need to send him many persuasion pieces. You might ask for donations instead. He
will vote for you anyway.
Voter ID is accurate but expensive. Most people have figured out how to not answer the
phone.
Predicting supporters. Look at polling data, party registration and ethnicity. Figure out who
supports you. Then figure out who will vote on election day. This helps you figure out
targeting for turnout (GOTV).
The older you are, the more likely you are to vote.
<30 30% vote
30-39 .45%
40-49 60%
50-59 75% vote
Why? Older people are more invested in the community. Voting is an acquired taste. Older
people don't move as often. They pay more taxes. They have roots now. The first time is
the hardest.
Political junkies are strange people. If you are reading this, you are a political junkie. Most
people don't care very much for politics. They care about issues that effect them, like taxes,
schools, healthcare, but not politics itself. How can we make politics relevant to average ...--..,
voters?
3. Independents are less likely to vote than registered Ds and Rs. The more you have voted in
the past, the more likely you are to vote next November.
votes in last 4 years % chance of voting
zero 20%
once 45%
twice 70%
three times 80%
all four times 90%
Predict turnout with turnout rates, turnout tables, analyze past elections. Age and length of
registration. Voter history. You might want to target independents who voted in at least 3
of the past 4 elections.
1. contact likely voters with persuasion pieces (mail, phone calls, canvassing)
2. contact marginal supporters and urge them to go to the polls.
Persuasion targets are 1) highly likely to vote but still undecided, 2) soft supporters.
GOTV targets are marginal voters who are likely to support your candidate.
Some targeting tools are voter file, poll results, past elections, and your own instincts.
Do a benchmark poll. Figure out who your targets are. For example, pro-choice GOP
women. Then use the voter file to find them. State party might have this info. Might have
to buy lists.
A pro-gun candidate may do a pro-gun mailing to people with hunting licenses. Get the
state's hunting license list and match it to the voter file.
Even with TV ads, one media market may have more democrats than another. Find out the
soft areas and hit them with TV ads. Use direct mail in areas where you aren't using much
TV.
Voter registration usually isn't done by campaigns. Other groups do this. Very time
consuming and costly. Newly registered voters don't usually vote. Let the party or the
League of Women Voters register people. You might want to do a targeted voter
registration at a gun show, however.
Absentee ballots are early voting. They can be targeted. Some people vote a month early.
Occasional voters- target them to get out the vote by absentee ballot. This extends their
voting window for a few weeks, if they are busy. But most absentee voters vote as soon as
4. they get the ballot. Still, you could try to call everyone who registered for an absentee ,-...,
ballot. Check every day with the election bureau. They may have a list of chronic absentee
voters, whom you could contact a little earlier for GOTV and persuasion.
Voter file is based on past elections. Don't forget your coalition. Who is your candidate?
What are his issues? Use this to figure out who to target.
Example: a conservative pro-life democratic candidate. But opponent is a Gap pro-choice
woman. The democrat may target more conservative voters and peel them off. Do a
message box and see the differences.
You can fill in the gaps in information with instincts and experience working in politics in
that state. Secure your base, then go after two targets.
You have a persuasion target and a GOTV target. Persuasion target is a frequent voter who
waffles on who to vote for. GOTV targets are your supporters who are somewhat unlikely
to actually vote.
Presidential years have higher turnouts, so there are more persuadable voters in Presidential
years. If your base is not engaged, then you have to spend time working your base. Are
there more persuadables? Or are there more people in your Sometimes-voting base.
Internet is good for targeting your base with email. For persuasion on the internet, try to ,-...,
target specific sites with banner ads. Mail and phones are better for persuasion than the
internet. In some campaigns the persuasion never stops.
Can use GOTV in an entire district if your party's performance is over 65%. You want to
reach your voters without activating the opponent's soft supporters.
Everyone uses targeting. Press secretary- what to say. Scheduler- where to say it? Field
Director- Where to send canvassers door to door?