Wednesday, July 30, 2008

MAFOs

As you would expect from its American and youth-driven character, the Obama campaign is littered with buzz words, acronyms, targets and daily goals. The buzz word most relevant to me on my first day of work today in the field office I've been assigned to is MAFO.. a term which stands for Mature Americans For Obama i.e. the politically correct term for Democrats aged 60 and over.

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

Last night at 7.30 PM local time, after a seventeen hour journey across the Atlantic through four airports, I eventually arrived at my final destination - Albuquerque, New Mexico. There I was greeted by a very affable middle-aged man called Brad who last year had set up and headed the grassroots campaign for Obama in New Mexico before Obama was a household name.

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.