My friend Jesse Gordon is running for Cambridge City Council. His announcement party is this evening and I'm one of the speakers - I have five minutes, right after Jesse. I'm going to talk about how campaigns work, and how volunteering fits in. My theory is that a lot of people who support candidates would volunteer more, if they understood what a campaign does and how what they do fits in. I think a lot of people who do volunteer for a campaign and spend a day or two canvassing, come away feeling like they haven't done a lot of good, and are less motivated to return.
So, help me out. I basically know how campaigns work. I volunteered a bunch of times for campaigns before I understood, so I remember some of the things I didn't know. And I've talked to people about it. But I'm sure there are things I'm missing.
What do you find mysterious about campaigns, particularly smaller ones for local/state office?
Have you ever volunteered for a campaign, even for one day? What value did you think you were giving? What did you know about, and what did you wonder about, how your work fit in?
(Oh, hey, if you know anyone who lives around here, send them the link, and if you're here, come!)
So, help me out. I basically know how campaigns work. I volunteered a bunch of times for campaigns before I understood, so I remember some of the things I didn't know. And I've talked to people about it. But I'm sure there are things I'm missing.
What do you find mysterious about campaigns, particularly smaller ones for local/state office?
Have you ever volunteered for a campaign, even for one day? What value did you think you were giving? What did you know about, and what did you wonder about, how your work fit in?
(Oh, hey, if you know anyone who lives around here, send them the link, and if you're here, come!)
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
We'll get Jesse's piece about the Grace site up on his web site soon.
no subject
1. Often find myself calling people who have been called before, often only hours before. Very demoralizing to listen to angry folks tell you to leave them alone.
2. Even during a full day of canvasing I often feel I've reached at most one or two people. Given victory margins are usually in the 100s or 1000s this has left me wondering if I was wasting my time.
It would be very useful to get an idea how the repeated phone calls and long days canvasing actually help.
no subject
You coming?
no subject
I worked on a whole bunch more campaigns for the next ten years, including many local ones (for the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors, for instance). The work I did ranged from stuffing envelopes to going door-to-door to writing database applications for keeping track of donations to calling people up on Election Day to remind them to vote to (pretty much every year) standing outside the polling place handing out pamphlets and such. Not knowing much about Massachusetts politics, I gave up doing that when I went to college, and then picked it up again to work on Sen. Kerry's campaign website in 1996. After that, I didn't do anything much again until last year, when I worked on the Kerry campaign in Virginia.
Even when I was in high school and didn't have that much time to devote to the campaigns I was working on, it really felt good to be part of the political process, even if in small measure. It didn't feel so great when the candidates I was supporting lost, of course, but the feeling when they won made up for the losses by giving me a feeling that I had, in a small way, changed the world. Even if you can't change the whole world at once, you can at least change a part of it, and who knows what might happen if you do?
Huh. I actually sounded kind of idealistic there, didn't I? I may have to give up my Offical Cynic Society membership if I keep this up. <grin>
no subject
As someone who has volunteered for a lot of campaigns, do you have any suggestions? things that you wish other volunteers would know about campaigns, so they understand how their effort really does make a difference.
no subject
Everyone knows that campaigns are fueled by money. You have to have signs, bumper stickers, pamphlets, buttons--not to mention office space and phone lines and such. Campaigns are fueled by money, but they're driven by volunteers. Signs don't put themselves up, envelopes don't stuff themselves, and people hate being called by computers (and computers that call people cost money!). Even if you only help a little bit, that's a little bit someone else doesn't have to do, so they can do something else, so more gets done. Since no campaign anywhere, ever, has done as much as they wanted to do, it's important that you do as much as you can.
That's why every volunteer is important.
no subject
How can a disabled person help out in a campaign office? Of course, all disabilities are different. Mine involve not being able to sit in a straight-backed chair and having trouble using regular computer workstations or raising my arms to do things on a table (like stuff envelopes). Is it possible to help out from a home computer?
More generally:
I follow politics and the news, but I feel like I can't make a difference, especially since my party seems too fractured to challenge the dominant party. What can one ordinary person do to contribute?
no subject
no subject
However, the point you make about disability is a great one. When working with campaigns to get more volunteers for them, I always ask for as many ways as they can think of for people to help, because some people won't make phone calls, others won't (or can't) go door to door, and so on - but we can always find something for each person to do, that is helpful.
And yet, I didn't think of addressing that in this speech. I'll put in something brief about it. Thanks!
How did it go?
Re: How did it go?
If you'd gone, would you have said hi and told me who you were? :)
Re: How did it go?
Throat still sore.
Re: How did it go?
(I already did try asking you, but that didn't work :)