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AFL-CIO Campaign

12 Mar 2008 01:07 pm

Alyssa Rosenberg from Government Executive offers this briefing on the AFL-CIO's conference call about their planned anti-McCain political activities:

The AFL-CIO wants to catch up Republican candidates for governorships and Senate seats in the negative coattails they hope to create for McCain. They’re targeting governor’s races in Washington, Missouri and Indiana, and Senate races in Kentucky, which they used as a testing ground for their national strategy during the 2007 governor’s race and Alaska.

They will spend a lot of money on the McCain component of the race. As Karen Ackerman, the AFL-CIO political director put it “We will spend what it takes.” They have $53.4 budgeted for grassroots activities during the race, but no exact estimate on what portion of that will be devoted to targeting McCain.

This will be a extremely targeted campaign. In Kentucky last year, they briefed volunteers with microtargeting data so they could tailor their conversations with individual union voters, and it sounds like they’ll be doing that again. Ackerman stressed that many of the voters will have multiple contacts, on multiple subjects, with the AFL-CIO, whether through the canvass on May 17, the 100,000 phone calls the AFL-CIO will make through May, or through several hundred town hall meetings on health care that will take place in April. In addition, the AFL-CIO is planning to have volunteers at every McCain appearance, including his town hall meeting in Exeter, NH, today, and they will be asking him very specific questions. Today those questions will concern outsourcing and the closing of New Hampshire factories. They have gotten very good at microtargeting, and in some ways, union structure lends itself well to this: volunteers can get data on voters they already work with and live near to inform their pitches for or against a candidate, and then report back on their conversations to the people who handle the microtarget databases, which is what they’d be doing anyway with shop stewards or union organizers.

The talking points will be relatively standard: they’ll hit McCain for votes he missed, times he voted against changes that would have benefitted union members, and areas where he’s followed President Bush’s lead, most notably on Social Security.

Especially in the likely Obama/McCain matchup, I think Social Security will be key. McCain's support in GOP primaries skewed old, and Obama's support in Democratic primaries skews young. In a general election, you'll be looking at age as a major determinant of voting behavior. And yet Social Security and Medicare are domestic issues on which McCain has a rock-ribbed conservative record. Whether or not older voters, especially from the white working class, focus on those aspects of McCain's record is going to be key to whether or not he has a real shot at the general election.

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Comments (9)

Don't worry, the media will convince all the geezers that Obama is smooth talking con man who will steal all of their retirement and give it to the Caliphate, while McCain is a true blue American who loves apple pie and baseball. Of course McCain wouldn't do anything to harm Social Security or Medicare. Also, McCain believes in a humble foreign policy.

Unfortunately Obama's willinness to use Republican talking points re the alleged inslovency of Social security makes it a bit more difficult to attack McCain in this area.

Something I feel like hasn't been mentioned since Iowa is Obama's proposal to exempt senior citizens making less than $50k from the income tax.

Yeah, Obama needs to do a better job on social security. I don't have a problem with Dem candidates borrowing stuff from the Republicans when it makes sense, but the noise over social security has never made sense. The sensible thing to do on social security is to cut military spending, reinvest in the American economy and target economic growth without running budget deficits. That will give the society the ability to support retiring seniors and the government the flexibility to make it happen in the years that revenues dip below benefits.

Given that I think he could really make political hay out of this issue against McCain, I'll be pretty disappointed in him if he doesn't move left on this issue.

$53.40 isn't going to make a huge difference.

It's the optics of it.

If some red-blooded union guys who likes to hunt, fish, buy stocks, and vote Republican doesn't want the AFL-CIO to use their union dues for such political purposes that are unrelated to collective bargaining, can they get the portion of his dues used for this campaign refunded to them?

I'm older and white working class. I will never vote for that spooky looking walking corpse.

The URL below is a great summation of John McCain's stance on many matters and his links to the Bush regime.

McCain Revealed: The Briefing Book http://www.aflcio.org/issues/politics/mccain.cfm

It is distributed by the Working Families e-Activist Network, AFL-CIO. They encourage its distribution with the statement: P.S. Please forward this message to everyone you know so they can see McCain Revealed: The Briefing Book.


Comments closed March 26, 2008.

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