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ELECTIONCENTER

Share It Spread It <Back to 'Articles' ARTICLE

Can You Vote For Me Now?

By Rebecca Wakefield/MOLI
The voter calling operation is a traditional tool of any political campaign. In the old days, and still in many races, this practice looked a lot like a boiler room operation. But in this first primary season in which the Internet is truly an indispensable part, the boiler room has become the living room, the bedroom, the laptop and the cell phone of every candidate supporter.

Yesterday, Hillary Clinton campaign chairman Terry McAuliffe emailed supporters asking them to sign up to call voters in West Virginia. He wrote: "Hillary is within striking distance of winning the popular vote nationwide — a key part of our plan to win the nomination. That means we need every last vote we can get in West Virginia on Tuesday and in the races to follow."

I was curious about how this works so I went on the Clinton campaign site and signed up to make some calls. They've got this down pretty well, considering it's basically a self-directed exercise with no real oversight.

When you log in, you get a page with a name and phone number, and a script to read. The script covers what to say in the event the person answers, someone else answers, or you get voicemail. If you do get the person, there are two main goals — first to find out whether they are likely to vote for Clinton, and second to try to get them to recruit other votes in their hometown.

I did wonder if any Republican (or Obama) operatives would think to exploit the potential, by, say, calling all these voters on the list and annoying them just enough to keep them from voting for Clinton. A more subtle approach would be to simply sign up for a bunch of names, say you called them, and fill out the results form incorrectly. I don't see any way the campaign would be able to stop it.

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What People Are Saying…

Leave a Comment

  • HunterLiz

    17:16 EDT, 15.May.08

    It is annoying!!
  • Suzanne

    14:55 EDT, 15.May.08

    Oh no! Political telemarketing ... awful.
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