What we learned from our PA delegate race that will help the next states

Don't forget the most important part:

BUILD YOUR LIST.

Keep in contact with those you meet. Next election you can call everyone you meet an ask them to pitch in.

Explain the best way to do this as they are walking in please.
 
PA has a lottery to determine the placement on the ballot.. So if RP people filed 100 candidates, and establishment filed 20.. We have a huge advantage for drawing the top 3 spots.

Yep this is hands down the best strategy and it was suggested to the campaign, but shot down due to lack of resources. In some areas it's hard to find more than 6 dedicated, respectable, trustworthy people to support for delegate. And the petitioning would have been a nightmare. I don't know how much the campaign spent on petitioning, but I'm sure it's in the high tens of thousands. If we doubled the candidates we could have easily tripled the cost.

The way to win, other than good ballot placement, is to get your party's endorsement. Obviously that's not going to happen until we all become committeemen with voting rights first.


I also think direct mail could be effective if we had money to burn.
 
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It's not just poll workers. You also really need to be someone in a lot of these places. Quite a few people who won delegate in PA were people that held offices.

Who knows where the Ron Paul Revolution goes past 2012, but I would say you need a combination of 3 things in PA.

1. Name recognition
2. Hold an office
3. Poll workers

none of these 3, you may as well stay home.
Yes, this is it.

It's all about name recognition here. The majority of Republican voters in this state vote for name they have voted for before. My district, CD3, had 3 well-known names and all 3 of those won.

I worked the polls and handed out lots of cards. I believe I got many people to switch, but I don't know if it was enough to overcome the name-recognition even at my polling place. I can guarantee you that my polling place did a lot better than those without a poll-worker, but the name-recognition thing is huge! The establishment in PA knows just which people have enough name recognition to put on the ballot in order to maintain their ability to choose their candidates.
 
Here are the Photoshop PSDs. These images have a color mode of CMYK, and that's because they are meant to be used by a professional printer. I Highly recommend that you get 10,000 to 15,000 of these printed at the professional printer. It's only a couple hundred dollars, and the quality is very nice. After you make your changes, you want to save these at Photoshop PDF, but without the Photoshop editing capability imbedded (this will drastically reduce the file size). Saving it as a PDF will embed the fonts, which will be needed by the printer. If you simply send them an image file, the fonts that are printed on the cards will look blurry instead of crisp. Additionally, I used all the highest quality export settings. If you have any questions, let me know. Send me a private message, don't just reply to this thread because I may not see it.

YOU MUST LEGALLY REMOVE THE PaLibertyDelegates (paid for by, website, etc) references. We do not, and cannot, authorize it's usage. You will get fined by the FEC if you do use it.

http://www.palibertydelegates.com/Delegate_Card_Front.psd.zip

http://www.palibertydelegates.com/Delegate_Card_Reverse.psd.zip

This is what we ordered form the printer:
Job Description: POSTCARD 4/4 4 x 6 SINGLE VERSION
Finished Size: 4X6
Stock Description: ENDURANCE 100# GLOSS COVER
Ink Requirements: Front : Black, Process Yellow, Process Blue, Process Red
Back : Black, Process Yellow, Process Blue, Process Red
 
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Here are the Photoshop PSDs. These images have a color mode of CMYK, and that's because they are meant to be used by a professional printer. I Highly recommend that you get 10,000 to 15,000 of these printed at the professional printer. It's only a couple hundred dollars, and the quality is very nice. After you make your changes, you want to save these at Photoshop PDF, but without the Photoshop editing capability imbedded (this will drastically reduce the file size). Saving it as a PDF will embed the fonts, which will be needed by the printer. If you simply send them an image file, the fonts that are printed on the cards will look blurry instead of crisp. Additionally, I used all the highest quality export settings. If you have any questions, let me know. Send me a private message, don't just reply to this thread because I may not see it.

YOU MUST LEGALLY REMOVE THE PaLibertyDelegates (paid for by, website, etc) references. We do not, and cannot, authorize it's usage. You will get fined by the FEC if you do use it.

http://www.palibertydelegates.com/Delegate_Card_Front.psd.zip

http://www.palibertydelegates.com/Delegate_Card_Reverse.psd.zip

This is what we ordered form the printer:
Job Description: POSTCARD 4/4 4 x 6 SINGLE VERSION
Finished Size: 4X6
Stock Description: ENDURANCE 100# GLOSS COVER
Ink Requirements: Front : Black, Process Yellow, Process Blue, Process Red
Back : Black, Process Yellow, Process Blue, Process Red
Outstanding information here! Hopefully it can be utilized in the upcoming states. Maybe these handouts could be modified to help Paul supporters win in local and state elections as well.
 
Standing for 14 hours, 10 feet from the door, handing the voters a card with candidates that you would like them to consider.

Edit:

It does work.

We will see your good work in the charts. Check the flipping thread tomorrow.
 
This is a good thread. Telling us that poll workers do work is important info. Giving out graphics that work is good.

Making assessments of each CD beforehand is also good. In this CD, we won 1. Perhaps with more poll workers we could've won 2 or 3. We can assume that in this CD, there were no famous delegate candidates. Someone mentioned CD 3, and noted that the people who won were famous.

Perhaps you have a conference call or 2 - all the heads of the CDs - where you discuss things like "how many delegate candidates are famous in your CD?" When it is realized that there's a fame gap there, maybe it is then said that resourses should be spent in CDs where there aren't famous people.

About "first on the ballot", it doesn't seem to be all that important. Yes, it's better to be at the top then the bottom, but based on my looking at the ballot, it seems like being at the top of the ballot was more helpful to delegates who were not our delegates.

We were in the top 3 quite a few times. How did we do with those candidates?

District - number of Ron Paul delegates in first 3(4) / number of those in top 3 who won.

1 - 1 / 1
2 - 0 / 0
3 - 1 / 0
4 - 0 / 0
5 - 1 / 1 (also won a delegate who wasn't in first 3)
6 - 0 / 0
7 - 3 / 0
8 - 1 / 0
9 - 1 / 0
10 - 1 / 0
11 - 1 / 0
12 - 0 / 0
13 - 0 / 0
14 - 0 / 0
15 - 0 / 0
16 - 1 / 0
17 - 2 / 1
18 - 1 / 0 (also won a delegate who wasn't in first 3)

So, we had 15 candidates in the first 3(4), and won 3 of them.
We also won 2 who weren't in the top 3(4).

It does not seem that being in the top 3(4) is really that important a factor. Yes, it
helps, but it does not seem to be the number 1 thing we should focus on.

I would want to know what the Brian P. Dougherty in District 18 story was, and I would want to know what the Thomas G. Brown story was in District 5.

Dougherty in District 18 was 8th on the ballot of 13, was 3rd in a District that elected 4, and we had a Ron Paul delegate candidate in the top 4 of the list. What were the special circumstances surrounding Doughtry.

Brown in District 5 was 5 of 6 on the ballot. Here it appears that the Ron Paul slate did well. We won 2 of 3, and the guy who didn't win did well.

I'd chalk up the District 5 performance to work on the ground, and Ron Paul being popular.

But I don't know about Dougherty.
 
Explain the best way to do this as they are walking in please.

When you are asking them for their vote for your candidates -- if you get a positive response - ask if they could fill out your sign-up form so you can keep in touch about election or issue information in the future.

Your sign-up form should have name, phone, e-mail at a minimum -- and address optional. Make sure when you database it to keep the info on what precinct the data was collected in. The form should have 6 or 7 issues and ask them to check off their top 2 so you know how to message and develop a relationship with them in the future.
 
Proof that working the polls works. Giving myself a little pat on the back here. Our delegates and our alternate won my little, rural precinct. I worked 9 hours at our polling place. It was like old home week. I was assisting the elderly in and out of their cars, folding walkers and putting canes in the bcak seats. LOL My best moment of the day. A hansome young man pulls up in a pickup. I said are you voting republican today? He very adamantly says, "Yes, I am." I said are you a RP Republican and he just looked at me and I said well, if you are here's your delegates. He smiled took the card and gave me a thumbs up when he left and I gave him a smile and the peace sign. Anyway here are the results: Ours were Cipolla, Price and Wilson. Alternate: Nancy Price
CD 10
REP Delegate National Convention 10 REP
Total
Number of Precincts 1
Precincts Reporting 1 100.0 %
Times Counted 182/0
Total Votes 436

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Anthony CIPOLLA REP 85 19.50%
Mark J. HARRIS REP 45 10.32%
Carol D. SIDES REP 40 9.17%
James T. PRICE REP 79 18.12%
Matt ROSS REP 42 9.63%
Pat SAYLOR REP 46 10.55%
Robert C. BROBSON REP 21 4.82%
Aaron WILSON REP 78 17.89%
Write-in Votes 0 0.00%


REP Alternate Delegate National Convention 10 REP
Total
Number of Precincts 1
Precincts Reporting 1 100.0 %
Times Counted 182/0
Total Votes 315

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Nancy E. PRICE REP 118 37.46%
Donna M. COSMELLO REP 89 28.25%
Mark J. HARRIS
 
About "first on the ballot", it doesn't seem to be all that important. Yes, it's better to be at the top then the bottom, but based on my looking at the ballot, it seems like being at the top of the ballot was more helpful to delegates who were not our delegates.

It provides a statistically significant advantage, but it wont necessarily win you an election.
 
And the petitioning would have been a nightmare. I don't know how much the campaign spent on petitioning, but I'm sure it's in the high tens of thousands. If we doubled the candidates we could have easily tripled the cost.

Where does the expense come from? Postage? Paying people to circulate petitions?
 
Last year I created Ron Paul Delegates for another member here, ninepointfive, to manage. He has done a great job of growing it. I think it could be helpful to add our lessons learned and conclusions to the site.

Would the OP and/or anyone with experience please consider going over there and posting?

P.S.
Funny sidenote... I got an email from my state coordinator and he had used the image I created for the header. Very cool to see come back. :)

cropped-ron-paul-delegate-header-4.jpg
 
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This just works in general..if we had people at polling stations in Virginia, we would've won.
 
I'm putting together an in-depth analysis of the numbers for all scenarios. I'll post a link when it's complete. I hope to create a template for each district in PA going forward that will outline the delegate process in it's entirety, from filing & challenges to campaigning & election day. It may take me a while. Lost of info.
 
This just works in general..if we had people at polling stations in Virginia, we would've won.

And we would have collected info on literally thousands of additional supporters who we do not know exist -- and gotten them to be delegates to vote for our party leadership, as well as RNC national delegates
 
This is important to push for showing up at the polls at Indiana, West Virginia and North Carolina. By the way, does anybody know any updated delegate numbers from Pennsylvania?
 
This is all great discussion--Thanks, it is helpful!

I wonder though, how many are still on the fence when getting to the state conventions with the precinct delegates already selected.
 
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