Monday, November 3, 2008
Election Eve
Today, after a full day's canvassing and an evening's phone banking, I should have been exhausted but there is such a buzz in the office it is hard not to be excited. Everyone is working flat out and taking nothing for granted but there is definitely a carnival atmosphere in the air to the point that it makes you giddy. Jitters mixed with caffeine, unhealthy fast food and sweets have made me feel like a young boy waiting for Santa to arrive on Christmas Eve. I just hope he brings the one thing I asked for and not a Mc Cain-shaped bag of coal.
To give you an idea of what it's like in a presidential campaign office on the eve of an election, I filmed a video tour for your benefit. Just click here to view it.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Yard Sign Wars
It all seems very petty but I can guarantee you it goes on. I took the above photograph while out canvassing today and while it is of course very amusing, some people are getting very upset about it. When I was in the Mc Cain headquarters the other day, a guy was filling out an 'Incident Report Form' which I was told was being passed on to the Albuquerque Police Department. He filled out the form and added it to the already overflowing stack. I haven't heard of as many Obama signs being robbed but that's only anecdotal.
Here's a flavour of what I've been seeing while I've been here.
Saturday, November 1, 2008
A Word of Thanks from the Senator
In the state of Nevada alone, the campaign registered over 111,000 voters. At present, 13% more registered Democrats have early voted there than registered Republicans. At the same stage in 2004, this figure was just 4%. Also, across all the swing states, the campaign has made contact with over 13.3 million voters either face to face or over the phone over the past couple of weeks. these figures are just phenomenal.
After a couple of minutes of these astounding figures, while the Obama campaign plane was landing in Springfield, Missouri, Senator Obama eventually came on the line. In a heart-rendering speech, he thanked all of the volunteers' efforts and asked us to give it our all between now and Tuesday. To hear what the Senator had to say, click here.
Don't mess with Texas!
The two main things going on at the moment in terms of volunteering at Obama campaign offices are phone banking and door-to-door canvassing. I've been involved in both, canvassing during the day and phone banking at night. For canvassing, I mainly work out of the South Valley office which is located in the poorer part of Albuquerque and home to most of the city's Hispanic population. In the evening, I usually phone bank out of the North-East Heights office where I was working in August. It is located in the more upmarket end of town.
The South Valley office has faced many challenges in recruiting volunteers; low voter turnouts, a disconnect with politics in general not to mention that most of the South Valley's inhabitants have to work multiple minimum wage jobs to remain solvent and thus have no time to volunteer.
As a result of this, campaign bosses have targeted it for placement with out-of-state volunteers. The idea is that supporters located in strong Democratic states or strong Republican states travel to the key swing states to help turn them Democratic. A large percentage of the volunteers in New Mexico, especially the more ardent ones, are non-natives of the state.
Early this morning, a bus-load of Texans arrived "fired up and ready to go" canvassing for Barack in the South Valley over the next few days up to and including Tuesday. A heavily 'red state', Texas does not offer many volunteer opportunities for Obama supporters there. A Democratic presidential candidate hasn't carried in this state since Jimmy Carter in 1976. So Obama volunteers in Texas make calls to voters in other states like New Mexico and if they can, travel to them too. I interviewed a couple of people getting off the bus. Most were really excited to be here but lamented the fact that they were Democrats stuck in a conservative Republican state. One volunteer, poignantly stated, "When Obama is elected, though, he will be President for all of us."
Friday, October 31, 2008
Victory HQ
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Michelle
Monday, October 27, 2008
The Houdini Project
The latest manifestation of this superior organisational machine is the Houdini Project. The Houdini Project aims to track voter turnout on a real time basis over the course of Election Day. To simplify, the campaign will be able to tell if one of the people who said they’d vote for Barack has actually turned up at their local polling station to vote already.
And how do they do this? The secret is manpower and an extensive voter database. To start off with, the campaign inherited massive databases of the electorate from previous elections. Combined with voter registration records, campaign volunteers have been able to contact people on a targeted basis, already knowing their age, sex, address, telephone number and party affiliation before speaking to them. Over the past few months every time a voter has been contacted, any more information garnered has been added to their ‘profile’ to make a super-database.
Armed with this, the campaign will be sending volunteers into all strongly democratic polling stations as well as some of the marginal ones to monitor who turns up to vote. At regular intervals throughout the day, the information will be returned for data processing. On the basis of this, those that don’t turn up to vote will be called to be reminded to do so either over the phone or directly to their door by other volunteers. If they need a lift, that will be provided too.
The sheer extent of the machine is mind boggling. How it is able to extend all of its tentacles into every far flung electoral precinct in every battleground state is overwhelming. The campaign estimates that the Houdini Project alone will add 2-3% to Obama’s electoral support nationally. So paranoid are they of electoral fraud on the behalf of the Republicans that they are keeping the final details of the project top secret until election day.
Sunday, October 26, 2008
The Comeback Kid
Although Mc Cain is trailing Obama in the polls, nothing can be left to chance. Every vote will count especially if we are to believe the extent to which certain pundits claim the 'Bradley Effect' will be a factor. Tom Bradley was an African American Democratic candidate for the California gubernatorial race in 1982. Despite being ahead in most polls in the lead-up to the election, he lost by a narrow margin to his white Republican rival, George Deukmejian. It was thought that race played an issue in the election and people said one thing to pollsters but did another in the privacy of the polling booth.
A lot has changed since I left Albuquerque in late August. For one, most analysts now classify it as 'leaning Obama' whereas it was still seen as a battleground swing state in late August. Since then as well, both candidates have announced their vice-presidential nominees and held their conventions. Joe Biden has more or less slipped under the radar as a steady moderate with 'respectable' white working class roots. Sarah Palin, on the other hand, has really ruined any chances for Mc cain to gain ground on his infinitely more calm, sophisticated and charismatic opponent. In my opinion, it is now Obama's election to lose. The next couple of days will undoubtedly be interesting.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Jeremy
As I finished up my contract with the Obama campaign in New Mexico, it was time for me to go stay with a friend in Colorado for a few days before flying home. Despite advice from the friends I have made over here, I chose to be adventurous and experience a Greyhound for real. Supposedly, a few months back a sleeping man was decapitated by a knife-wielding psychopath on a Greyhound in Canada. This didn't scare me a huge amount but it definitely kept me on my guard!
When I arrived at Albuquerque's Greyhound station, my bus to Denver was running a two hour delay so I decided to get some fast food from the crummy bus staion restaurant. There I met Jeremy, a 17 year old kid who was experiencing a 13 hour delay on his bus to Farmington in upstate New Mexico. He seemed pleasant and quite eager to make conversation.. so I sat down beside him with my pizza while he ate his burger and chips.
Jeremy had a lot of stories to tell. He started by telling me where he had been - visiting his pregnant fiancée in Roswell in southern New Mexico. His journey had been cut short on the advice of his fiancée because of a death threat from a 15-year-old gang member down in Roswell. The reason he wanted to kill Jeremy was because he was jealous of his relationship with his fiancée. Jeremy took his girlfriend's advice but queried whether she was cheating on him.
According to Jeremy, neither he nor his brother were allowed set foot again in the state of Missouri because a good few years ago his younger brother got into a fight with a kid and pulled a gun on him. At a young age his parents seaprated. It was unclear where his mother was but his father seemed to be around but Jeremy wanted nothing to do with him. Previously he had been living with his aunt until she had him committed to a mental institution. He certainly had no fond memories of that place. He assured me though that he had been released long ago and had been off his medication for over six months.
Now he was living with his friend and her mother and couldn't wait until he was 18 so that he could "go out on his own". When I asked him where he had met his fiancée, he told me "through my group back home". The way he was talking, it didn't sound like a religious Christian group to me but moreso what the media like to brand as a gang. He also seemed to have a disposable income not consistent with his means. He claimed not to have a "proper job" but was decked in the latest brand names and had a top of the range mobile phone.
When I started talking to Jeremy, I was naturally a bit nervous as he told me about his chequered life. I began to fear what he might do to me and whether he was capable of just turning on me. The more I talked to him though, the more I realised he was a very nice, genuine guy who had had a rough time growing up with very little support from either his family or the state and had got caught up in this gang lifestyle.
I could only imagine the world he lives in. While I was there, he was consoling a friend who had texted him saying that a gang was after him and that he mightn't get to see Jeremy ever again. He instructed Jeremy to look after his fiancée. Meanwhile, I got a text from a friend recounting the previous days in Ireland: rain, boozing and work. Hardly comparing like with like.
And what I found saddest about Jeremy was that he is the tip of a very large iceberg in the States. As part of the campaign in Albuquerque, I visited the Robert F. Kennedy Charter School, a last chance saloon for high school dropouts to graduate and go on to third level education. The kids attending the school were extremely deprived and quite difficult individuals. The hard work and stamina of the staff there was second to none but they really are fighting an uphill battle.
At the Obama rally I attended, Governor Richardson stressed the importance of education for the USA going forward. Obama even paid lip service to it in his rousing speech. I just hope the Democrats get in and follow through on their promises. Jeremy is living proof that George Bush's No Child Left Behind Act has not worked.
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
The Overdue Video Gallery
I've finally managed to upload the good videos I took from the event. The first one is the American national anthem, the Star Spangled Banner, being sung by a Hispanic student from the high school it took place in. Now, I'm no Simon Cowell but there were definitely a few hairy notes here.
Here are Obama's opening words at the town hall meeting after the single mother had spoken. You can see it takes him a while to calm the crowd down from their religious-like fervour. Then he has to go through the adulation of all the local officials starting with his former rival, New Mexican Governor Bill Richardson. I cut him short on this one.
The following is Obama's main speech before he began fielding questions from the crowd. In this he focuses on the theme of the event, the economy, while managing to get in a few digs at Mc Cain. It's too large to upload on to the blog so click here to view it.
Here was the dicey first question asked by a member of the audience looking for an explanation as to why the Senator had compromised on his position on Iraq since the primaries. Obama's response really impressed me. It was frank, open and he effectively managed to diffuse the potentially embarrassing situation.
More Media from the Event
Monday, August 18, 2008
Thank you.. I'm Irish, by the way. Go Barack!
The whole security operation was overseen by the United States Secret Service in cooperation with the Albuquerque Police Department, the County Sherriff, the County Fire Bureau and last but not least.. the Albuquerque Public Schools Security Service. While necessary and relatively efficient, it was enjoyable to watch each official vye for his or her own jusrisdiction to be recognised. After two hours of ID'ing, security sweeps and from our perspective, waiting around, they were ready to let us go through the metal detectors and take up our positions in the hall.
As an usher in the main hall, we had to make sure the seats were filled in an orderly fashion in accordance with fire regulations and keeping security concerns in mind. Some of the first people let in had been camped out since 6AM so when they arrived in the main doors, they expected to get the best seats in the house. When they were told to move to the end of the first row, a riot nearly ensued. Minor crowd control was needed by the various security forces and this helped ease tension a bit.
Despite all the training, briefings and security checks, the whole thing was relatively chaotic as many people ignored those in charge and scrambled for the etst seats they could get. At events like these, you really see the dark side of people; those who will step over others to get a metre or two closer to the Senator while still being 3o metres away; not to mention those who claim wild and wonderful disorders such as claustrophobia and reduced mobility when they have no problem pushing people out of their way to get to the top of the queue. Maybe I'm just cynical..
After the crowds had slowly shuffled in to their side seating and the VIPs had been seated in their ringside seating, the event was ready to kick off. As to be expected, speakers on the programme were organised in order of party ranking starting with grassroots party organisers, moving on to Albuquerque's Democratic mayor, then New Mexico Governor and one-time presidential hopeful, Bill Richardson.
After all the state officials had given their two cents' worth, it was time for the star of the show. At 1.40 Senator Obama arrived on stage to a gushing introduction by Governor Richardson. However he did not arrive alone. He came on stage holding the hand of a single mother of two who was having to work two jobs to find a way make ends meet. She was the first to speak. She addressed the whole auditorium of roughly 1,600 people telling them her life story and why she was inspired by Barack Obama and his Campaign for Change. This set the agenda for the town hall meeting: Obama's recovery plan for the US economy.
The format of the town hall meeting consisted of the Senator addressing the crowd in a rousing speech which lasted about a half an hour. Then he fielded various questions from the crowd. For the duration of his presence on the stage, I had the onerous task of being a microphone runner for the VIP section. This meant that whenever anyone asked a question in the VIP section of the audience, I had to run over to them with the mic and hold it while they talked; something which looks a hell of a lot easier than it is, especially when you have 1,600 people looking at you, not to mention the focus of scores of cameras.
Some of the questions asked from the audience were challenging, especially the first lady to speak who accused Obama of compromising his ideals to win over the conservatives. In true Obama style, he was able to eloquently counter her argument in tune to a rousing applause from his doting audience.
One of the funnier parts for me was when a young Hispanic girl asked him how he felt about immigration he was clear to point out that the USA's immigration problem not only lay with Hispanics but with undocumented Irsh and Poles. I saw the irony in the fact that it was I in fact who had held the mic for the girl who asked the question.
When question time was over, he said goodbye to the crowd and did the rounds for a few handshakes and book signings. I managed to get right up beside him and shake his hand. You can see how close I was in the photo below. When I was shaking his hand, I was frantically thinking of something interesting or intelligent to say but when I opened my mouth all that came out was, "Thank you. I'm Irish by the way. Go Barack!" I guess I was star struck or dumb-founded but that's all I could muster. He replied a simple "Thank you." Of all the things in the world I could have said to him, that was the height of it.
In addition, with all the excitement, I had put down the mic I had been carrying in order to shake his hand. When I turned around to pick it up, it was gone. Someone had evidently taken a fancy to it. I felt like a bit of an idiot going back to the sound staff not least because it will cost them $400 to replace. It was a minor mishap though to what was otherwise a brilliant day. I guess Obama wasn't getting that free a lunch with my volunteering efforts after all.
Sunday, August 17, 2008
Mr. Obama is coming to town
As a full-time volunteer, I have been asked to staff the event. My job will be to usher people from the metal detectors at the entrance to the gym to their seats in the hall. Understandably, excitement has reached fever pitch amongst the campaign staff and volunteers. A scramble for tickets ensued straight after the announcment while field organisers tried to ensure that the most committed volunteers got a place. As you imagine, "volunteers" stared appearing out of the woodwork who tried to justify why they deserved a ticket over the next people. It was kind of funny but pitful in a way. Within hours, all the tickets were gone and although they're free, the tickets are now like gold dust.
This evening, all the event staffers had to go to a briefing about tomorrow. Here's a video of one of the advance staff giving us a briefing what we are going to be doing.
Like I said, I will be working as an usher tomorrow at the rally so we had to get briefed on that at the high school. The advance party ran through the strict security operation and then we had to lay out all the seats in the auditorium. Here's a video of the hall all ready for the morning.
I'd be lying if I said I wasn't caught up in the Obama mania at this point. I plan to be up at 7 tomorrow morning like a child on Christmas morning ready to chant for the big man.
Saturday, August 16, 2008
Moulding the Grassroots
In order to do this, today the campaign in Albuquerque held a city-wide training event attended by over 200 volunteers. The sole purpose: to mould the grassroots into effective agents of the campaign.
The training resembled an off-site corporate training day, consisting of various seminars from 10AM to 6PM, all held in lecture theatres and classrooms of the University of New Mexico Law School. Upon registration, each participant received a 36-page training guide detailing the Obama campaign's organisational structure, its methods of attracting volunteers to the movement and how then to organise one's fellow volunteers. It even gives pointers on how to tell "your story" like I have been doing since I got here.
In fact, part of the training was a session in which people who had inspirational stories as to why they were volunteering for the Obama campaign came forward and recounted them to the audience. Despite my cynicism towards the whole idea of recounting one's life story, I actually did find some of the stories touching. One lady in her late 60s told of how she had to work two jobs to pay for her healthcare and prescriptions. Later on, a teenager got up and said she was volunteering for Obama so that he would bring her cousin back from Afghanistan.
To be quite honest, I was bowled over by the efficiency of the Obama machine. It is truly an amazing feat how it has been able to transform the myriad of disparate groups of people that support the Senator's candidacy into a unified army of volunteers that is motivated to fight for his presidential bid and above all the intangible goal of 'change'.
Thursday, August 14, 2008
The Hillary Factor
In New Mexico, Democrats were very evenly divided between Hillary and Obama during the primary season. The Clintons' historic support amongst Hispnics, which constitute a large part of the population here, gave Hillary an edge of 1,709 votes over her rival or just under 1% of the Democratic electorate.
Amongst the many calls I have been making here to registered Democrats seeking support, there has been a sizeable cohort of people who are still bitter at the fact that Hillary lost her presidential bid to Obama. Based on anecdotal evidence, these people tend to be for the most part older, white or Hispanic and more often than not female. That would seem to reinforce the exit polls done across the country after the primaries.
This of course is not helped by Hillary's luke warm support of Obama's campaign. Both she and Bill will speak separately at the Democratic Convention in Denver at the end of the month in what some have crtiticised as a ploy to take some of the limelight from Obama. Her die-hard fans have even signed a petition to call for a floor vote at the convention which aims to show the massive support Hillary did get despite losing. Some crazed Hillaryites have even told me over the phone that they firmly believe Hillary can still clinch the nomination at the convention!
Whether these people will end up voting for Obama or not is unclear. For the time being, the campaign is more concerned with reaching out to people who have been apathetic towards politics and politicians in recent years. If they can boost voter turnout amongst a demographic which rarely votes, the possibilities are endless. Alienating the die-hard Hillaryites may be a mistake though. Only time will tell if the strategy pays off.
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Team Building and One-on-Ones
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Forgotten America
Friday, August 8, 2008
I have a dream..
Monday, August 4, 2008
Happy birthday, Barack!
And no volunteer-driven gimmick would be complete without a goal. This time a little more straightforward than other like-minded gimmicks: making contact with 47 potential Obama supporters over the phone. When the said volunteer made 47 contacts, he/she was entitled to a slice of birthday cake and as you can see below, this cake was well worth fighting for.
Sunday, August 3, 2008
Hope + Action = Change
Obama’s campaign is certainly a descendent of this long-standing tradition; the only difference being its preference of iconic words over long-winded slogans. Change and hope are without doubt the iconic words of this campaign. Accordingly, our field office here in Albuquerque has undergone somewhat of a makeover over the past few days. Large tracts of paper were produced along with permanent markers in a few different colours, mainly blue and red – the campaign colours and of course the colours of the American flag. These were combined to make inspirational posters of iconic words and Obama quotes to jazz up the office and motivate the staff and volunteers. Rather than harp on about them, take a look for yourselves.
At the launch of the central volunteering office in New Mexico on Saturday evening, candidate for the 1st Congressional District of New Mexico, Martin Heinrich, as the highest ranking Democratic Party official present, made a speech to the assembled crowd of Obama supporters. In an effort to ride on the back of Obama’s Campaign for Change towards victory in November, he fired up the party faithful with the following sound bite, “Hope + Action = Change”. And our response? Well, of course we replied in spontaneous unison, “Yes-we-can. Yes-we-can. Yes-we-can…”
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
MAFOs
My job here for the next few days is to ring MAFOs. MAFOs are rung during the day because it is felt that they are more likely to be at home than their younger counterparts who are in turn contacted in the evening. Campaign policy is that MAFOs should not be rung after 8PM in case the poor old dears are in bed.
So, I've been having a great time speaking to the senior citizens of Albuquerque. At times, I've felt akin to Joe Duffy counselling these poor people; at other times it brought me back to when my grandparents were alive. They really are a mixed bunch. Most are delighted with the chat and will make great efforts to tell you all the things they would do to volunteer were it not for their ailing health or the recent death which has occured in their family. I've even gotten the odd Irish American who emigrated in the 40s who then proceeds to trawl through my ancestry looking for a common connection. One lady proclaimed herself to be a holocaust survivor and informed me in great detail of how America had been a godsend to her.
For the most part, these people are favourable towards Obama which is quite uplifting. Maybe his old grassroots-style of politics resonates with them like Roosevelt's or Kennedy's did. For every rule there must be an exception however and that came in the form of a guy who tried to convince me that Obama was the devil incarnate and that if we thought George Bush was bad, we were in for a shock. There's always one..
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
The Old Guard -V- The Avant-Garde
A former history academic and lifelong political hack who had once turned his hand to a Silicon Valley technology start-up which went belly-up after the dotcom crash, Brad embodied the get-up-and-go of the baby boom generation. In the car from the airport, he recounted his war stories of previous campaigns. Names like Mondale, Clinton and Gore came to the fore as well as his own takes on the Florida recount, the Kerry-Edwards defeat and the most recent protacted battle with the Clintons. Needless to say he was a man of great experience.
When we arrived at the Obama campaign HQ in Albuquerque, the profile of people was somewhat of a contrast to Brad. To start with, the place was swarming with students. My first reaction was that these were interns or summer volunteers. I was later to find out that the regional director is a hot shot 21-year old Stanford student who is taking a year out to devote his time to the Obama campaign. He is joined by a team of like-minded contemporaries, all college students or recent graduates with little or no previous experience who seem quite preoccupied with "busting the ass" of the neighbouring district. Meanwhile, poor Brad had applied to be a staffer but despite his previous experience and zeal, he was turned down.
I don't know why this surprised me. After all, Obama's popularity is grounded in the student movement. He has drawn massive crowds of youths wherever he has gone and from the get-go he was able to maximise his PR and fundraising on the internet, something which obviously favours younger voters. I think the reason it jarred with me is because it made me realise how far I was from Ireland where it is near-on impossible to get young people politically active and even when they are, they are grossly outnumbered by their elders.
Both systems have their pros and cons. The thing that would worry me about the Obama campaign is that if this is a widespread trend, it does not bode well in the long term. Youthful, energetic and arrogant campaigns have gone before which failed to connect with the core vote. One thing that the Republicans are good at is convincing the electorate that they are "like them". The Lisbon Treaty referendum was an example of how a removed and arrogant campaign can have disastrous effects.