Jordan
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10 Lessons from Rand, Amash, and Schiff
With the primary battles now over for three of the most well known liberty candidates, it is time to sit back, reflect, and take a lesson from each primary race. In the paragraphs below, I hope to outline a few key points for each candidate and how we should better allocate our resources to winning elections.
Rand Paul
Rand Paul was hands down our easiest victory. Old GOP talking points and ideas still persist throughout Kentucky and this was a state where we could simply waltz to victory. Luckily, even without political experience, Rand Paul had the name to be able to take a senate seat without any prior government position. This is rare, but so is today's political climate.
Polls and Politics
We should note that Rand's victory did not come out of thin air. From the very first polling of the race, Rand Paul was within 11 points at 37-26. These kind of poll numbers helped establish the idea that Rand Paul could win the primary, and gave him legitimacy both in the media and with potential voters. Unlike previous campaigns that had significant late momentum (Medina, and in some ways, Schiff), Rand had a foundation. I would argue that without good early poll numbers, candidates do not deserve our support.
Politicking
I don't think there was a single person running as a liberty candidate that put in as much sweat equity as Rand Paul put into winning the Senate race. All over the state he took the time to meet with groups of people big and small (some as few as 20 people in “meet and great” settings). This kind of work ethic and “pedal to the metal” campaigning is the kind that we should support in the future. Having a candidate speak directly to the electorate makes our job—funding and providing general support--easier.
Advertising
Rand benefited in that he raised as much or more than Trey Grayson in virtually every single quarter. This allowed him to go toe to toe with Trey and attack him on being a Washington insider.
However, if Rand didn't already have a strong position in Western Kentucky, Rand would have been at a severe disadvantage. The Western Kentucky DMAs are largely made up of populations living in Indiana, Illinois, and Tennessee. Having to run TV ads in these areas would have dried up his funds faster than ever, and would have forced his campaign to spend huge amounts of donated dollars just to reach a very small Kentucky population. In my own DMA that includes some of Western Kentucky, there are more than 1 million people, but the vast majority reside in Indiana and Illinois and cannot vote for a KY politician. Those are wasted dollars.
Justin Amash
Justin “motha-fuckin” Amash was probably the best candidate least known by the liberty movement. He donated more than $1000 to Ron Paul's presidential election and put his mouth where his money was in each of his votes on the MI State House Floor. Despite being a liberty candidate through and through, support in the Liberty movement was weak at best, but thanks to his work in the Michigan state house, he bested a large republican field for Congress.
We can learn more from Justin Amash than we can either Rand or Schiff. Amash's victory should be used as a roadmap for all future liberty campaigns. Run for state house, vote like a libertarian, run in a heavily GOP district, then win in an anti-establishment year.
Purely Grassroots
Amash earned respect from constituents in the Michigan state house by explaining each and every vote in real time. His principled stances (frequently being the only “No” vote) earned him headline after headline, and media mention after media mention. Of all the liberty candidates this year, he got the most free publicity and it certainly helped his name recognition in the republican primary for MI-3 Republican primary.
Patience
The biggest thing we can learn from Amash's campaign is that running for a lower office is the best way to establish credibility, name recognition, and a voting record that generates support. Just imagine if the hundreds of thousands of dollars we've spent on federal races were allocated to state house races. State house races typically cost just $100,000 for an easy victory. We've spent 10 times that much on just one loser.
The liberty movement should help nurture small campaigns that can lead to huge political success in the future. If we can fund serious candidates in state house races, we can create a monster of a political victory in just a few short years. Off the top of my head, I should mention Glen Bradley (GunnyFreedom on the forums) who in recent polling is ahead by double digits for NC state house. He could easily be another cheap victory in the state house, then in the US house a few years later.
Peter Schiff
He's fiery, he loves the camera, and he's not one to be silenced. Well known in the liberty camp, but a relatively unknown in the mainstream, Peter Schiff was to be one of our best candidates up for election this year.
Unfortunately, Schiff didn't even come close to winning his primary. But rather than simply moving on after a terrible loss, we should be sure to take some notes from his campaign, as well.
Know Your Opponent/District
Peter Schiff was sure to be an excellent contender against Chris Dodd. Dodd's favorability was in the toilet, his position/knowledge on the financial crisis was polar opposite of Peter's. Dodd, however, dropped out early and Schiff should have followed.
Richard Blumenthal, a candidate with awesome name recognition (Schiff had practically zero at this point), was sure to win the general election. Blumenthal had his own baggage, but being a Dem in a largely Democratic state will be enough to insure his victory, regardless of how much Linda spent.
If Schiff shouldn't have quit after Dodd made his exit, he most certainly should have after Linda entered, and we should have cut our support.
What Campaign?
I say this in the best way possible, but Peter Schiff lacked severely in voter outreach. Rather than appeal to the people who would show up to vote, Schiff tried to make friends at the RTCs, preaching to the political class. As we know, this strategy backfired greatly in that Schiff, after failing to get enough votes at the convention, had to waste resources to get signatures to be on the ballot.
It wasn't until the final few weeks until Schiff used the strategy that Rand used to win Kentucky—get out and talk to people. The RV tour through CT was months too late.
Advertising
Connecticut is one of the worst places to run a candidate with limited funds. The New York City Designated Market Area includes 1 out of every 15 Americans, or some 20 million people. Of those 20 million people, only a small percentage are going to show up to vote. Needless to say, the best form of advertising (TV) was simply too expensive for Peter to utilize. He had to advertise to 20 million people just to potentially get the votes of 100,000.
As much as this forum may hate television, it remains the best way to get the word out about a product/service/campaign. In a recent survey, more than 40% of respondents said that a TV ad contains enough information to buy a product. Have you ever seen an Apple advertisement? Car advertisements? Pharma and household product ads? They contain almost NO information, but have enough impact to get people to spend their money on a product. TV is essential to winning an election.
Phone Calls Are Worth Something, but not Everything
Phonebanking was far more productive than I could have imagined, helping to increase Schiff's name recognition and developing a dialogue between the grassroots and ordinary voters. Schiff polled at 15% before the election was held, and then came in at 22%, a 50% disparity between the the day before the election and the day of. I can't help but think this gain is due in a large part to phone banking.
Phone banking, however, needs to be used in unison with other media. Let TV and Radio be the cannons, and phone banking the sniper rifle. With a larger media buy, and continued phone banking, I bet Schiff could have pulled off at least 30% at the polls. The simple fact of the matter is that people didn't know his name, and hearing his name for the first time, from a telemarketer no less, is probably not the best marketing strategy. Make do with what you can, I guess.
One Term Candidates are a Bad Investment
Peter Schiff would have probably lasted just one term in the senate representing a state like Connecticut. Compare that to Rand, who will have that seat for as long as he desires, and Amash, who won't lose a general election unless he murders someone in his heavily GOP district.
This movement will take time. There is no sense in putting candidates in the senate representing states that go from dem to republican with each election cycle. We need to focus our energy in places where, after winning the for the first time, we can just sit back and win each and every year without much energy.
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