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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
21.05.2008
Obama Organizes Florida

Today's Los Angeles Times has an interesting piece on Obama's efforts to organize the Sunshine State:

In recent days, the Obama campaign has shifted as many as 15 staff members to Florida, launching a massive voter registration drive targeting young people and African Americans.

Campaign volunteers appeared over the weekend in Miami at a Haitian Flag Day event, trying to make gains in an immigrant community that leans Democratic but that lags in voter participation. ...

The drive relies in part on a large corps of volunteers, such as the more than 500 Obama backers who showed up on a recent Saturday morning at six Florida locations to be trained in finding and tracking potential new supporters.

In the fall, the campaign will target high school seniors, many of whom will be 18 by election day, and will work to ensure that college students are properly registered so they can vote while at school.

Volunteers with clipboards are being instructed to target black and Latino churches for voter registration. Also on the Obama list are registered voters who have a history of not turning out, with a special emphasis on under-40 Republicans and female Republicans. That is territory sought in 2004 by President Bush's reelection campaign, but strategists believe McCain will not have the same appeal.

A lot of people say that one benefit of the extended primary has been to force Obama to build organizations in states he might have neglected--or at least to build them earlier than he would have. I've always responded that Obama would have built organizations in key states whether or not he was contesting a primary there--that pretty much anything a contested primary forced him to do he could have done had he already wrapped up the nomination.

However you feel about this question, though, Florida should shed some light on it come November. I'd guess that the Obama organization there turns out to be just as strong as the Obama organization in, say, Ohio, which benefited from the contested primary. But we shall see.

One other interesting note: "Microtargeting" is a word you often hear associated with Mark Penn and the Clinton campaign, but Obama appears to be doing his share of it, as any smart campaign would. Says the LAT: "As in Florida, Obama's campaign has begun a national voter registration drive that uses some of the same 'microtargeting' techniques honed by Republicans in the 2004 presidential campaign, which sought to locate new, GOP-leaning voters who might otherwise have been overlooked."

--Noam Scheiber

Posted: Wednesday, May 21, 2008 12:47 PM with 4 comment(s)

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winjer said:

Dem microtargeting and voter registration has got to be a lot easier than the GOP version. Think of all the low-hanging fruit. (these Haitians, the young, all of the semi-apathetic non-political-but-left-leaners that I know).

May 21, 2008 1:25 PM

thetraytiger said:

Noam, I always thought 'microtargeting' was when politicians blatently pander to a particular demographic by proposing to, like, give them stuff. Voter registration drives don't quite fall into that category.

May 21, 2008 1:40 PM

liberal reformer said:

Democrats have been laggards in Rovian techniques. I do mean techniaques, too, and not uberstrategy. Rove is clearly not the 800-pound gorilla that many thought him to be. His coalition-of-the-right strategy tanked big-time in 2006.

May 21, 2008 6:37 PM

The Stump said:

Karl Rove has an interesting op-ed in the Wall Street Journal today about the Obama field organization

July 10, 2008 1:39 PM