Lessons from the field

I have spent the last week recovering from the disappointment of election day. I have spent a lot of time talking to the mid-level operatives from the McCain campaign. (the top level are on TV playing the recriminations games, in undisclosed locations, or drinking their brains out in Vegas)  There are things that we can learn from this election.

The first is that John McCain won the primary because of an often neglected part of the coalition: military voters. Redstate's Erick Erickson said the point well on the night of the Florida primary:

Tonight was not a failure of conservatism, but a triumph of military voters who have made their home in the Republican Party because we are the party of a strong national defense.

In both South Carolina and Florida, they won it for McCain. In the grand coalition of the GOP, we've talked about social conservatives and fiscal conservatives. We've all ignored the military voters, except John McCain. And he won them big. His message resonated.

This is not a sufficient grassroots for the GOP in a national race, but it was a powerful one in the primary. We as a party should feel and water this part of the coalition better than we have done in the past. We will likely get a generation of candidates who served in Iraq and/or Afghanistan who will be powered by the volunteer work of volunteers who supported McCain. In addition, I wouldn't be surprised if this developed into a meaningful faction in GOP politics in the next couple of years.

Second, the GOP is good at managing the mechanics of GOTV. However, we are not very good at managing and empowering our grassroots. The Democrats are. Open Left's Mike Lux, now on the Obama transition team, said:

I am grateful that field organizing and working with grassroots volunteers is actually in fashion again, and in so much bigger a way than it has ever been in my lifetime.

At a time that technological and volunteer energy was at an all-time high, even on the GOP side, the RNC deployed a mythically small number of field staff, opened a mythically small number of campaign offices, and generally deprioritized grassroots. We simply didn't tap into that energy effectively. Often we failed because we were inept. Often, these were the product of intentional decisions by state parties (see below) who were afraid of new people (see above). More broadly, a whole number of volunteer engagement plans failed to materialize. I still have drafts of some of them.

Third, many of our state parties are completely dysfunctional. COMPLETELY. There have been some horror stories out of state parties that should have been able to pull their own weight but simply weren't. I won't name names yet, but it is not good. There is indeed a correlation between the states that have lost elections and the state of their parties. There are two solutions to this. Either someone needs to take them over from below or, much less preferably, they need to be fixed top-down from DC with new staff, bypassing and eventually surpassing the state parties.

Fourth, history will probably show that the mistake of squashing of the libertarian grassroots out west in the form of the Ron Paul campaign could resonate for years. Fewer activists, less money, etc. Many people will try to blame McCain and/or his campaign, but I do not believe that a single state party stood up for a significant part of their grassroots. Often, the parties were so weak that they ended up being complicit in tossing out Paul-supporting libertarians because they were afraid of new people coming in and taking over. These same parties were already in desperate places because of their inability to respond to the growing strength of latino voting blocs with outreach to bring them over. These are not the responses of healthy parties.

 

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4th point is great

here is the problem - all the people who need to get out of the way (or out of the party) think they are the ones to lead the party  out of the wilderness.  Good luck redistributing (sorry to use that word) their power to the grassroots...

Party structure, how

Party structure, how campaigns are run, net and grassroots organizing are all helpful and good tools to have but the key thing in the Presidential election this year was that Obama did his best to appeal to as many people as possible. He sold his tax plan rather effectively, with most polls showing people believed Mccain was more likely to raise their taxes than Obama. His push for cheaper, more accessible health care was easier to grasp than Mccains convoluted 'tax credit, across state lines' whatever the hell. His proposal for education appealed to teachers, parents and students alike. His call to end the war in Iraq responsibly definitely resonated with the people I know in the military.

All in all he offered something for everyone... and for the life of me I can't tell you what Mccain proposed outside of Ayers, socialist, marxist and Joe the plumber.

While I'm generally for fiscal responsibility and personal liberty I'm much more comfortable supporting a man whose proposals at least aim to improve people's lives in a real way than a man whose sole goal seemed to be the demonization of his opponent.

So maybe the GOP should work on crafting proposals that would have a direct positive impact on people rather than scorching as much earth as possible in hopes of getting elected.

 

about Ron Paul

You can't just acknowledge the presence of your grassroots and then mobilize them. You actually have to give them a seat at the table. Libertarians used to be a "wing" of the GOP, but after the marginalization of Ron Paul in 2008, it's clear that this is no longer the case.

One disaster scenario for the GOP is if a viable libertarian candidate shows up in 2008 within the Democratic party. If libertarians are given influence inside the Democratic tent, they will flock there.

they're already moving there.

I'd rather see them take over both parties, because I believe that Criticism is the Only Known Antidote to Error.

 

Right On!

Excellent observation. 

Military Vote

Be careful assuming the military vote is in the bag. McCain lost a lot of points with me when he mentioned Russia more than Iraq or Afghanistan in his speech at the RNC. It also doesn't help that he opposed the new GI Bill that greatly expands college opportunities for those who serve. Opponents say it will hurt retention rates, but if it's attracting more people in the first place then it'll balance out. 

I think we're moving past the days when Conservatives are seen as "the party of a strong national defense". Everyone recognizes that national defense is important, but when both sides can speak smartly on it, elections start becoming about other things. When it comes to Democrats in the military, I have to agree with General Petraeus's sentiments: "there are more than you think." 

I like me a bored president

Clark's plan for Afghanistan was excellent.

Why couldn't we have him for president? *sigh* I want a genius as president, honest!

(also, he's right, global warming is a national security issue)

The military vote is interesting

Officers tend Republican.  Enlisted ranks tend Democrat.  Whatever those GOP officers do after they leave the service, they don't seem to run for office.  Democratic military veterans in congress outnumber GOP vets by a huge margin.  (Sorry, I can't put a number on it, but there are only two or three GOP vets and a lot more on the other side of the aisle.)

Let me note also that during his campaign Obama addressed the security issue in part by having a few dozen senior retired officers endorse him.  Whether or not that convinced average voters, it may have been of interest to military voters, and it shows that the officer corps is far from monolithic.

donations from the officers corps this year

ran strongly to Obama (very weakly to mccain, though there were some paulites)

I wish that we had better exit polling on military voters

My prediction is that McCain won the officers big time, but split or even lost the enlisteds. Anecdotes from SE Iowa confirm that pattern. And those are navy guys.

Obama took Bexar County

Which is mostly San Antonio and its suburbs. It voted for Bush in 2000 & 2004. It's also a big military town with all the AFBs. But the population is roughly 40% Hispanic. I wish there was more comprehensive exit polling from Bexar, I bet the voting demographics would've been interesting.

Ron Paul supporters

We at the MassGOP have a great relationship with the Ron Paul supporters - all of their delegates voted for McCain at the convention and they worked hard for many of our state legislative (non-Paul) candidates.  They are also working to join Republican Town Committees and inject some new energy at the local level. 

Grassroots is where it's at

Soren you are absolutely correct re grassroots and some of the state parties....I talk to some veteran people where I am and they all said the same thing......we have to rebuilt from the grassroots up and elect state party chairmen who know how to do that....we don't need anymore state party chairmen who do nothing but issue press releases.....there was not enough field staff, there wasn't enough offices, it was several steps below the last 2 presidential elections, there was little collateral many ended up buying yard signs, buttons, etc. then selling them to pay for more....I haven't seen that ever....I've worked on my share of campaigns and run GOTV a few times so I know what it takes and if we don't get back to the it won't matter about the message or the candidate we won't have enough votes to win....the technology is there we just need to use it better and get the best data available for GOTV....