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A Post Mortem from the Grassroots - The California Special Election...
CaliforniaRepublic.org ^ | 11/11/05 | Kevin D. Korenthal

Posted on 11/11/2005 10:06:02 AM PST by NormsRevenge

The voters in the state of California decided yesterday to maintain the status-quo and voted to reject Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s reform ideas. Why did an electorate, that only 2 years ago voted a reform candidate into office, not vote to give him the tools to achieve that reform?

Before we answer that question, I want to examine a few things that went right in this election. First of all it is obvious that we were successful in getting our people to send in their absentee ballots. When the results of the permanent absentee ballots were dumped at 8:15, it looked like at least 73 and 75 would win. This is due to a very successful campaign to get Republicans to vote by mail.

Another thing we did right was in the area of volunteer recruitment. Our 2-year long volunteer drive resulted in a last minute deployment of volunteers for phone-banking and precinct walking. However, as a grassroots volunteer organizer, I am left wondering what would have happened if we had filled the phones and had precincts walked every weekend throughout the election instead of just in the last 3 days. I blame the late start in volunteering on voter apathy. People seemed to find every excuse in the book for not getting out and campaigning. Notable in this area was the state party’s program for paying precinct walkers.

Eileen is a conservative that has worked at the polls in a retirement community for many years. She remarked to me earlier today that a great number of the voters who came in yesterday acted as if this was the very first time they had voted. Eileen described the scenario in an email to me.

I woke up with the thought that I should/would write to Gov. Arnold and tell him what brought out so many senior democrats to vote yesterday. It was a small mailing plainly marked that it was from the Democrat Party. It was the same size as the Official Sample Ballot and looked very similar to the back page that had the addressee’s name and address. It wasn’t as bulky as the Sample Ballot which many people take to the polls with them, and of course it was easier reading because it only had the names or the people to vote for and Yes or No next to the titles of the various State Measures (rather than 6-8 line descriptions). This was much easier for seniors to carry and read and use to mark their ballot. It was a very clever piece of political advertising and evidently it worked, because even before the morning was half over yesterday, I had told myself that more democrats in [the retirement community] were going to vote them in any previous elections. And evidently they did!

I went through the exercise of sharing this with you because it represents a broader problem we faced in this election. The governor sought to present the Special Election as a simple “us versus them” scenario, a “vote for me if you want to live” sort of thing. Unfortunately the issues presented in this election were a lot more complicated than that. The Democrats realized that a lot of Californians would not be able to figure all these initiatives out and used that knowledge to design a mailer that simply voted NO for them.

Proposition 73 would have required abortion clinics to inform the parents of minor children 72 hours prior to performing an abortion on their child. Although the sponsors raised enough money to get the initiative on the ballot (no easy feat I might add) they did not plan for selling it to voters once it was scheduled for a vote. Of all the initiatives on the ballot, Prop. 73 had the least amount on money spent on it. Yet, all the way up to the week before the referendum 73 was polling like it would pass. Then the pro-choice Nazis got to work on it. First they released a brilliant television spot that challenged the viewer to figure out if they were as cynical as the creators of this initiative were. “I trust my daughter and my daughter trusts me”, was the line in that ad that grabbed you. Then a last minute auto-dialed, recorded message phone campaign told horror stories of daughters turned away by their parents seeking back alley abortions… You get the picture. We hurt Prop. 73 by not giving it the same budget for advertising as Prop. 77 and the others.

But this election is over and soon we will have the exact numbers of who voted and for what. As a grassroots campaign manager, I will be pouring over that data and will be working with the folks upstairs to come up with a comprehensive plan for reshaping our campaign efforts for 2006 and beyond. I won’t get into details here, but voter registration, a better media presence and the use of a sniper rifle rather than a shotgun when it comes to choosing issues and candidates will be among of the solutions we employ.

One sentiment I keep hearing from my fellow conservatives is that GOP voters stayed home as a repudiation of the soft-core politics of the Pete Wilson-era GOP that has been the agenda for Arnold’s Special Election. As one GOPer said in an email to me recently, perhaps Arnold will learn from this election and will, for his re-election campaign, embrace a meatier agenda, say illegal immigration and the border.

BTW, this is not the way to move forward.

House leaders late Wednesday abandoned an attempt to push through a hotly contested plan to open an Alaskan wildlife refuge to oil drilling, fearing it would jeopardize approval of a sweeping budget bill Thursday.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: california; grassroots; postmortem; socalpundit; specialelection
Kevin D. Korenthal

Mr. Korenthal is a lifetime resident of Southern California. He was a City Chairman for Bush/Cheney04 in Los Angeles County and currently writes a daily weblog at http://www.socalpundit.com.

1 posted on 11/11/2005 10:06:03 AM PST by NormsRevenge
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To: NormsRevenge

BTTT


2 posted on 11/11/2005 10:10:15 AM PST by kellynla (U.S.M.C. 1st Battalion,5th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Div. Viet Nam 69&70 Semper Fi)
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To: NormsRevenge

Thouroughly disgusted by the defeat of all of those props except 79 and 80.

What I find interesting is that there have been no allegations of Voter Intimidation, Fraud, racial bias or the like. That is amazing. Or is it just that the Dems won that the allegations suddenly disappear?


3 posted on 11/11/2005 10:13:55 AM PST by jw777
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To: NormsRevenge
I'm so glad I left California. It truly is the land of fruits and nuts. What idiotic and stupid parent would vote AWAY their right to consent for an abortion. Morons!

California will be the first state to collapse from the weight of its own pernicious decadence, stupid socialistic policies and illegal immigration.

4 posted on 11/11/2005 10:26:21 AM PST by IVC1974
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To: NormsRevenge

California Democrats are notorious for appearing to be lackadaisical, until a week before the election when they dump tons of very effective, negative mail and radio ads against Republican candidates and initiatives. I've seen it happen up close and personal - I worked for a California Republican assemblyman who appeared to be cruising toward reelection against a "stealth" candidate - but a week before the election the Dems dumped thousands of slashing mail pieces, too late for us to respond. It worked brilliantly. They give Republicans a false sense of being ahead and not having to work hard, then they come in with full force attacks too late for the GOP to respond. It sounds like they did it again with these initiatives. I don't understand why the California GOP keeps falling for it.


5 posted on 11/11/2005 10:32:52 AM PST by Dems_R_Losers (The Kerry/Lehane/Wilson/Grunwald/Cooper plot to destroy Karl Rove has failed!)
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To: jw777
What I find interesting is that there have been no allegations of Voter Intimidation, Fraud, racial bias or the like. That is amazing.

Maybe because there wasn't any?

6 posted on 11/11/2005 10:52:36 AM PST by Lurking Libertarian (Non sub homine, sed sub Deo et lege)
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To: Lurking Libertarian

maybe not, but there has been the allegation in every election that dems haven't won. now, suddenly, they win and by golly, THIS election is legitimate.


7 posted on 11/11/2005 11:02:54 AM PST by jw777
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To: Dems_R_Losers

Cali GOP needs its own "72 hour plan" it seems.


8 posted on 11/11/2005 11:25:56 AM PST by WOSG (http://freedomstruth.blogspot.com/)
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To: Lurking Libertarian

Hell, I was there. Vote fraud is used in every election in California. See my previous posts which detail some of the scams. If you don't believe me, check the voter rolls with a door-to-door attempt to talk to live voters. I found 50% (!!!) of the voters in a sample were non-existent phantoms in one congressional district.


9 posted on 11/11/2005 2:07:29 PM PST by darth
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To: NormsRevenge
According to Kevin D. Korenthal in the following excerpt:

embrace a meatier agenda, say illegal immigration and the border. BTW, this is not the way to move forward. .... House leaders late Wednesday abandoned an attempt to push through a hotly contested plan to open an Alaskan wildlife refuge to oil drilling, fearing it would jeopardize approval of a sweeping budget bill Thursday.

... Moving the GOP to the left is moving forward.

Wonder why the GOP is having problems? Just follow the path of destruction within the party agenda by the CountryClub/Rockafeller/McCain wing of the party and then add the very popular policies of the neocons (open boarders, larger government, expanding social programs; to name of few) and you have the magic elixir for the shrinking party.

Ever wonder why Bush did so poorly in California? I give you Kevin D. Korenthal; astute political swami and progenitor of the CCRMc wing in California.

10 posted on 11/11/2005 3:35:25 PM PST by Amerigomag
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To: Dems_R_Losers

---California Democrats are notorious for appearing to be lackadaisical, until a week before the election when they dump tons of very effective, negative mail and radio ads against Republican candidates and initiatives.---

Not just in California either. Remember Hillary running against Lazio? The night before the election they aired a fraudulent commercial pretty much saying that Lazio was against women and didn't care if poor women died of breast cancer.

The irony was that Lazio was the sponsor of a bill in Congress that dealt with breast cancer and in fact appeared in a photo-op with Hillary's very own husband when the bill was signed into law!


11 posted on 11/11/2005 7:51:06 PM PST by claudiustg (Go Bush! Go Sharon!)
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