Posted on 01/16/2014 6:42:07 AM PST by SeekAndFind
For two days last week, Republican strategists, political consultants, and digital gurus convened in a sleek, wood-paneled conference room on the third floor of New York Citys Standard hotel. Their mission: to reverse the fortunes of the Republican party by leveraging voter data, technology, and public opinion to win elections.
More than a year removed from an election year in which Democrats used data to gain insights that allowed them to swing a handful of races, including at the top of the ticket, those gathered were determined that the GOP do better in this years midterm elections. Among the attendees: National Republican Senatorial Committee executive director Rob Collins; Alex Lundry, the Romney campaigns director of data science; GOP pollster Kristin Soltis Anderson; Johnny DeStefano, a former aide to John Boehner, now serving as the president of Data Trust, the organization providing a warehouse for Republicans voter files; and representatives from Google, Facebook, and AOL.
Top party officials have readily admitted that the GOP has work to do in the realm of data collection and digital targeting. The next step, Collins says, is to start getting better, and that is easier said than done. The goal of last weeks meeting, in the words of one attendee, was to get everybody on the same page ahead of the midterm elections.
Campaign strategists and consultants were urged to stop handwringing about how to allocate resources between mail, television, and the Web and instead to use voter data to determine the best method for persuading individual voters. That, speakers explained, allows campaigns to allocate resources efficiently: to deploy volunteers to the neighborhoods where their efforts are most likely to pay off or to pay for advertisements only where persuadable voters are most likely to see them.
That is what the Obama campaign and Democrats did with ruthless effectiveness in 2012.
The Republican National Committees post-election report recommended creating a new data platform accessible to conservative groups and candidates, bringing data crunchers into the RNC, and identifying strategists and donors to build an external data-analytics institute. There are signs of progress. The RNC has moved to centralize its voter data through Data Trust and made key hires, among them Andy Barkett, formerly of Facebook, who now serves as the RNCs chief technology officer. Barkett plugged the committees latest efforts to top-dollar donors at events including an American Crossroads retreat in October and a September fundraiser hosted by New York Jets owner Woody Johnson.
Multiple sources say that tension between Data Trust, effectively a subsidiary of the RNC, and Themis, a voter database funded by the Koch brothers, has dissipated under donor demands that Republicans not duplicate their efforts. Representatives from the two organizations have been in conversation over the past six months to discuss the possibility of cooperation but have yet to reach an agreement. The Koch-affiliated group, which employs just under 50 people, including in-house statisticians, has touted the superiority of its data. Data Trust, created in 2011 to shoulder the cost of building and managing the GOPs voter file the party was looking for ways to deal with debt left in the wake of Michael Steeles chairmanship has evolved more slowly but, according to a GOP strategist, is finally coming out of its slumber. Among donors, the strategist says, there is no appetite for competition between the two groups. The idea that theres going to be competition at the realm of raw data is a bit silly, says Republican strategist Patrick Ruffini, the CEO of the digital-media firm Engage.
Nonetheless, the RNCs announcement in May that Liberty Works, a group backed by Karl Rove ally and Silicon Valley venture capitalist Dick Boyce, would build the platform through which Data Trust could manage its data, effectively put Rove and the Kochs, two of the most influential forces on the right, at loggerheads. The RNCs announcement later last spring that the short-lived partnership had come to an end has led, sources say, to some cooperation between Data Trust and Themis.
The biggest hurdle is translating these efforts into electoral victories, and there the signs are less inspiring. When numerous polls showed Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe with a comfortable lead against Republican Ken Cuccinelli in the Virginia governors race, the RNC simply stopped investing in television ads and voter-mobilization efforts. We had twelve months to get the polling right, says Yale political scientist Luke Thompson, a consultant to the NRSC. Yet the party, relying on internal polls that had McAuliffe cruising to a seven-point victory, spent just $3 million on the race, compared with the $9 million it expended in 2009. McAuliffes people knew all along it was going to be a two-point race, Thompson says.
Indeed, Politicos Alexander Burns chronicled how the McAuliffe team, using sophisticated data modeling that mirrored that performed by the Obama campaign the previous year, foresaw a tight race and systematically located the voters it needed to drag The Macker over the finish line. Democratic volunteers asked voters to sign postcards pledging to vote and mailed them back the week before the election. Another social-science technique employed by the campaign was to hit swing voters with experimentally refined messages; it knew which voters were persuadable and on what issues.
This sort of targeting is something that, since John Kerrys loss to George W. Bush in 2004, the Democratic party, in a cumulative effort and over the course of eight years, worked tirelessly to perfect. Ironically, it was first deployed by GOP strategist Karl Rove, who introduced micro-targeting into politics in 2000 to sharpen the Bush campaigns ground game, leveraging voter data to identify supporters across the country. Democrats, reeling from two consecutive losses and smarting in particular from ceding the technical advantage to Republicans, committed to redouble their efforts. Howard Dean, who served as chairman of the Democratic National Committee from 2005 until 2009, helped to usher in some of this progress. He recognized the potential of the Internet to mobilize large sums of money through small-donor contributions, says Thompson. Those donations and Internet outreach in general provided a platform for political big data.
The AFL-CIO, too, created the Analyst Institute in 2006, an organization housed in the labor unions headquarters and devoted to determining the most effective ways to turn out grassroots voters, which it did largely by analyzing social-science experiments. The Obama campaign in 2012 not only used the groups research findings, it embedded Analyst Institute scientists within its ranks.
Democrats also centralized their voter file when former Bill Clinton deputy Harold Ickes founded the firm Catalist in 2006 to serve as a data warehouse. By 2008, most of the partys candidates were also inputting data into a network known as NGP VAN (voter action network). Democratic campaigns on every level were learning from and building off each other and providing future campaigns with an increasingly clear and evolving picture of the American electorate.
By the time the 2012 campaign rolled around, the Obama campaign had a comprehensive handle on the data available to it so much so, Slates Sasha Issenberg has written, that while pundits talked in the abstract about reassembling Obamas 2008 coalition, for many campaign staffers the goal was literal. According to Issenberg, the Obama campaign began the election year confident it knew the name of every one of the 69,456,897 Americans whose voters had put him in the White House.
Meanwhile, Yales Thompson says that Republicans simply failed to realize that data analysis and get-out-the vote efforts were as important as they proved to be. Thanks in part to bad data, they thought the country was, at a fundamental level, favorably disposed to their candidate. Most of the Romney camp genuinely thought they were going to win, Thompson says. These were serious, smart folks, but the 2010 midterms gave them an inaccurate picture of the electorate.
The task before the GOP now is similar to the one that confronted Democrats a decade ago: to effect a cultural shift within the Republican party, toward what GOP strategist Ruffini calls data-driven decision making all the way down the ballot. While the RNC has invested in key hires at the national level, Ruffini worries that its not happening at the state and local levels and that the changes being discussed in Washington may not be scalable. He and others acknowledge a talent gap that Republicans, for all the thinking they have done over the past year, have yet to confront. We are vastly outnumbered in the number of field operatives and the number of people doing data analytics, Ruffini says, and we always have been. Solving that problem, more than anything else, may prove crucial to the partys future.
Eliana Johnson is media editor of National Review Online.
For a party that has nothing but contempt and disdain for it's Conservative T.E.A. Party base, good luck to 'em.
RE: For a party that has nothing but contempt and disdain for it’s Conservative T.E.A. Party base, good luck to ‘em.
If their so-called “data analytics” ignores the TEA PARTY, then it’s garbage in, garbage out.
Playing with computers is probably a lot more fun than reading the Constitution.
Yeah... data analytics. That’s the problem...
After all, they won in 2010 without all this new tech. Tea beats tech when it is tried.
I’ve always thought that an ideal part of our message should be in training candidates how to deal with a hostile media and how to answer questions during debates.
For example, let’s go back to the the Indiana US Senate race in 2012. Let at Richard Mourdock’s major gaffe that led to him losing a race he pretty much had in the bag.
And of course, there’s always Todd Akin in Missouri. His interview with Richard Jaco was so ill-planned that it made him look almost certifiable.
And lastly, we did our side no favors in the recent government shutdown. With the sole exception of some legislators like Ted Cruz and Sean Duffy, we were clearly unable to articulate our position to the American people.
RE: how to deal with a hostile media and how to answer questions during debates.
All those libertarian talking heads who tell us that “social issues” should be avoided don’t know what they’re talking about.
You might want to avoid social issues, BUT THE MEDIA WILL BRING IT UP REGARDLESS.
Better be prepared to talk coherently about gay marriage and abortion ( especially as it relates to rape ). THEY *WILL* ( I SAID *WILL*, NOT MIGHT ) BRING IT UP.
“...When numerous polls showed Democratic candidate Terry McAuliffe with a comfortable lead against Republican Ken Cuccinelli in the Virginia governors race, the RNC simply stopped investing in television ads and voter-mobilization efforts...”
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This particular statement is pure BS. The real reason why they spent so little on the Virginia race was because Ken Cuccinelli was a Tea Party conservative candidate and not one of the GOPe’s boys.
Here is the most important data for them:
“QUIT PI$$ING OFF THE BASE AND STOP BEING PROGRESSIVE”!
We can and did articulate but media simply ignores that.
How do we get around that when they control the media almost in Toto?
They only present their message, it doesn’t matter what ours may be.
How about an “Integrity Surge”
More junk mail, more spam email, and more robocalls.
No thanks, Karl.
RE: Richard Mourdock and Todd Akin
OK, what’s the best answer to “abortion and rape” in 45 seconds or less?
Orca was such a hit, they green-lit Orca II.
More data crunchers?
Reminds me of companies that are in financial trouble. When a company starts laying off ‘floor’ employees and hiring more accountants, that company is in trouble.
That is what it sounds like for the Republicans.
More data crunchers is not the solution. The Republican problem is with the ideology they exhibit inside the beltway. The party Elites need to spend now until May or June outside of the beltway and find out what is going on in ‘Realville’.
The best thing that can happen is to have COUNTY level GOP make their own dbase...it’s what we are doing in our county tea party GOP. We finally figured out relying on state or national party is a fools errand.
And ...
Steffy to Romney: what would you do when a state bans contraceptives?
Romney: Huhhhhhhhh!!!!????!!!!!
And do something about vote fraud while they’re at it.
We can all see that the gop-e would rather a democrat win than a conservative. We know the the rinos want gay marriage and amnesty, whether it’s to take the issue off the table or they really don’t care or personally want gay marriage. They chase the democrats left no matter what the issue is. 2020 will it be lowering the age of consent so they can get the pediphile vote? Making it illegal to be prolife or forcing pastors/priest to marry gays...the depths of hell goes deep and the gop-e will go there if they think they can win. God help us. We need to pray desperately.
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