
my obsession yesterday was making sure that all the data got entered. given that we had lots of canvassers, knocked on lots of doors, and we had a fairly good response rate, we had an incredibly large amount of data from over the weekend. fortunately, we have a terrific, terrific team of volunteers who are entering our data from all our voter contact efforts. on saturday, we had the data team come down to pick up walk sheets at least three times (that i'm aware of), and at least twice on sunday, just to be sure that all the data collected got into the database. yet we still are collecting new data, and i was really focused on making sure it was in the database before it got closed to cut our gotv universe.
the michelle event offered additional opportunities to collect new data. the wonderful thing about barack's campaign is that they spend so much attention to detail, which makes new data capture possible. in my mind, the whole purpose of these events is to identify, motivate and mobilize new supporters, new volunteers and new "strategic corporals." i'd bet the communications department has an entirely different purpose, but -- thankfully -- they are not mutually exclusive.

you may recall that i had previously observed only one actual yard where i had seen a hillary yard sign. i had seen plenty of hillary signs that were placed in the public way, just not in people's yards on the routes i take around the area. this is no longer true. the lower merion and narbeth democrats met this weekend, and suddenly, there is a plethora of hillary signs in people's yards. of course, the local party is officially neutral. it's just a coincidence that the signs suddenly appeared the morning after the party meeting. yeah, right. but one of the streets that i travel at times now has a suddenly strong presence of hillary signs in front of their estates. they weren't there last week. they weren't there saturday. they just appeared after the local democratic party function. hmm.

taryn, our regional field director, decided to move into our office. although i don't know why, i'm sure she's a bit tired of working out of her car. it could also be our close proximity to philly, given that we are on "the famous mainline" (according to mrs bored). but this decision put us in a curious quandry, given that we are in an old bank building and it's not exactly designed for offices. we've been using the teller counter for phone banking, the lobby for volunteers, the customer service area for computers and phone banking, the single office space for our two field organizers and the kitchen is where our college organizers are working.
the only thing left was the vault, which isn't exactly prime work space. for one thing, the security needs of a vault make it, well, rather echo-ey when having conversations. and the staff spends a lot of time on the phone. regardless, taryn (our most valuable possession) moved into the vault -- although i think she's a little freaked out by it. her "door" is a heavy, think vault door that i don't think anyone wants to shut, because we have no clue what will happen if we do.

the decision to keep the tickets outside, which seemed a little risky (it might have rained) on sunday night, turned out to be a good one. the lobby (our primary volunteer work space) would have been jammed at various points in the day, and the commotion combined with the phone calls of people asking -- in contradistinction to the explicit instructions included in communications -- to have tickets reserved early in the morning would have been insane. well, i would have gone insane (stop snickering).
two young women came in from chicago this afternoon to volunteer. one of them had gone to elementary school with barack in hawaii. the other woman's husband used to be principal (iirc) of a school here on the mainline. like other out-of-state volunteers, they got the run-down from hy and then were thrown into the fire. andy, another one of our committed local volunteers, yelled over to me, "your relief is here. now you can go home!"

the campaign decided to leverage our success in high school night make signs and recruit volunteers for the michelle event. so sarina and isabel (probably others) sent out the word through facebook and their other social networks that we were changing high school night to monday and we'd be making signs instead of phone calls. the ever intrepid robin was recruited to help design the hand-made signs and then every one was put to work drawing in between the lines. isabel mentioned that she could silk-screen her shirt design (barack the vote) on a poster, but it looks too professional. and too professional doesn't look grassroots. it's an odd irony, a real grassroots success story, isabel's shirts, bags and perhaps posters are too professional looking and people watching on tv might not understand their meaning. they might think we had to get a printer or something.
but making the signs was a group effort. to be honest, more guys showed up than i expected. i suppose i'm not artsy, but i was surprised. when you watch the brief footage on television, know that the hand made signs were hand made by our high school volunteers. they are truly barack stars!

instead, i was asked to go help the advance team set up for the michelle event. "you've done it before," i was told. which i have -- a long time ago. generally, this advance team sets up an event as a three man team, but one of its members was doing an event. advance really is simply preparing a space so that it looks good on tv, maintains good traffic flow and meets the various needs of different constituencies (like security) very, very quickly. ivan, one of the advance men setting up this event, said he told his parents that he was like a glorified wedding planner when trying to explain his job. that's a bit much. i told him what i learned, when i did this a very long time ago, is that the people who i'd run into and swap war stories with were the arena concert promoters, who also would take over a big space and in a very short time have to do the same thing.
politics is entertainment, too, even if it isn't american idol. all the world's a stage -- or a 24-hour news cycle.

"i'd feel disloyal," one young woman replied. that's the sad part. it also shows just how divided this primary has split democrats. but what else can hillary do? she ran a shitty campaign and the only thing she can do is destroy the likely nominee in order to have a shot. it's hard to see how the democratic party benefits, but obviously the clinton legacy is more important than the party. since i watched them do the same thing to the democratic party in florida -- basically destroy the democratic party there in order to win the state -- i can express no surprise. the clintons are only loyal to themselves. they don't care a wit about all the damage they leave in their wake. so we expect a lot more damage to come from hillary and her campaign, in her shermanesque quest to burn down all that stands in her way.

hope is coming to pennsylvania. we don't know yet how many voters will reach out and grab it, but we know it's coming. today, the mainline gets a glimpse. in a week, hopefully, it will vote it's dreams and not it's fears. and we've had that for seven years. time to move away from the bush age and into a new age of hope...
donate here to reunite the democratic party behind a strong nominee who can beat mccain; you can help barack win in pennsylvania and across the country by making phone calls now.|
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