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Winning
Elections Through Local Organization
by Joe Garecht
Marching to victory by the Precinct, Ward, or Division
I recently spoke with a friend coordinating efforts to prepare a Republican
candidate for a future run for governor. Her first goal was
not mammoth
amounts of fundraising, or volumes of media coverage (though those things
are certainly important.) No, her first priority was making sure she had
a coordinator in each of the state's counties. Those coordinators would
then recruit on the city and township level. Winning elections requires
strong local organizations. Whether running a local, statewide, or national
campaign, local organization is integral to a campaign's success.
The local organization a campaign creates is so important because it is
involved in all of the key activities the campaign participates in, from
fundraising to voter contact to getting out the vote. The organization
is integral to winning the election. In fact, a local organization
may be better suited to carrying out these activities than any other campaign
apparatus because of one distinct advantage: proximity. The local organization
is simply the closest contact the campaign can make with the voters. Think
about it: who would you rather give money to, or vote for? The guy who
calls from campaign headquarters reading your name from a list, or your
neighbor down the block who tells you how wonderful his or her friend,
the candidate is?
The Plan: Winning Elections with Strong Local Organization
There are three main components to creating a local organization that
is strong and effective: preparation, recruitment, and contact. Each component
must be completed to keep the local organization potent.
Preparation
Before recruiting volunteers for the campaign's local organization, the
campaign team must decide what it is that it expects from it's volunteer
precinct captains and leaders, and what shape the organization will take.
Local organizations are often broken down by the smallest possible electoral
unit: the polling place (precinct.) When the election is for a local enough
race, the campaign should aim to have a captain in place in each precinct,
who can (and should) recruit additional volunteers to help with the local
tasks. When the election is for a higher office (statewide, major city,
etc.) the campaign will still want to have a volunteer leader in each
precinct, but may only select leaders for a broader area (ward, district,
etc.) and leave precinct recruitment up to them.
The campaign must also decide what activities will be left up to the local
organization. Such activities are based on the campaign strategy, and
generally include circulating nominating petitions, literature drops,
get out the vote activities, door to door campaigning, working the polling
places on election day, and fundraising activities (such as small group
meetings or selling tickets to a fundraiser.) Local leaders should also
keep the campaign abreast of political developments in the precinct.
The campaign should prepare a packet of necessary materials and directions
for completing activities, including "street lists" (lists of
registered voters in the precinct arranged by block -- usually available
from the local board of elections.)
Recruitment
Possible volunteers abound, and the campaign should look for them in all
of its activities. Sources for potential volunteers include: the campaign
staff's friends and family, local leaders, friends of the candidate, people
who have called the campaign asking to volunteer, politically active neighbors,
political science students at the local college, etc.
After recruiting a local precinct captain, the campaign should make sure
to detail all of the activities that the captain should perform, as well
as give him or her the packet that was previously prepared. Winning elections
requires informed precinct leaders. The captain should be encouraged to
recruit other responsible volunteers, as well as utilize those provided
by the campaign. Often, campaigns also give the captain a "vote goal."
That is, if the campaign strategy calls for 200 votes in a particular
precinct, the captain should be given this number (or a slightly higher
one, say, 225) as a number to shoot for -- then the campaign and the captain
should talk about how that number of votes can be garnered from the precinct.
One other strategy that few campaigns use, but which proves highly effective
and is highly recommended, is to host a "campaign school" for
its local precinct captains and/or volunteers. This "school"
should be held at a convenient time and limited to a relatively short
period of time (one to two hours for local volunteers, longer for actual
campaign staff) During this seminar, the campaign team could bring in
local political experts, consultants, or highly knowledgeable staff or
volunteers to teach the captains strategy for winning elections, and provide
them the tools necessary to reach the voters. For great tips and
information you can use in your campaign seminars, sign up for The
Local Victory Newsletter.
It's full of valuable information you can pass on to your volunteers.
Contact
After the precinct captains are out in the field, it is extremely important
to maintain contact between them and the campaign. The volunteer coordinator
or applicable staff should check in regularly to make sure they are doing
what they should. Remember: the goal is winning elections by using the
local organization. So use it! The captains must be kept abreast of campaign
development, either by newsletter or e-mail. The candidate's visits to
their area should be coordinated with the precinct captain. In short,
the local organization needs to be kept engaged and active. Doing this
will ensure that the organization is chugging along towards its ultimate
goal: election night victory.
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