As the political news shows bury themselves in the micro stories such as Affaire Clark, the macro factors continue to be the most striking indicators in this election. In addition to right track/wrong track numbers that in poll after poll after poll after poll (despite some Nate-noted problems with the LA Times/Bloomberg poll) presage a mammoth wave of voter dissatisfaction, voter enthusiasm disparity continues to be a macro-level harbinger of bad tidings for Republicans. (See case studies here, here, and here.)
Courtesy of Pew, we learn that Democrats are following news about this presidential race much more closely than Republicans. Since the start of the campaign, Pew has tracked the percentage of partisans and independents following campaign news “very closely.” As July 2008 opens, this index shows its widest gap since Pew began tracking: 52% (of Ds) to 28% (of Rs), a near double-up.
This is a fascinating chart. Three things jump out. One, the intensely competitive race began to climax interest-wise in late February with the onset of “Shame on You Barack Obama!” and Clinton’s drama-laden Kitchen Sink Strategy.
Two, for all of the initial hit from Kitchen Sink Strategy drama, for all the Jeremiah Wright and Bittergate controversies that began in mid-March and which captured the media’s collective breath, the "very close" public interest dropped sharply (10-15% across the board).
Three, the single most interesting time for Republican voters, to date, occurred not when John McCain won the nomination battle but when Obama and Clinton were going at it hot and heavy in the roughly ten-day runup to the March 4 primaries.
This final point has to be troubling and underscores the rationale behind the shakeup in the McCain camp yesterday. Whichever guilty party you want to blame it on – historic and dynamic Obama/Clinton campaigns, the “liberal media” obstinately refusing to report on McCain, lack of enthusiasm among Republicans for what their own party hath wrought, McCain himself for his gruntychucklish “that’s not change you can believe in!” lime-green delivery – the fact that the window of McCain’s own nomination win (mid-30s) was far less attention-capturing for Republicans than Obama v. Clinton for the March 4 runup (mid-40s) cannot be spun both positively and persuasively.
To win, McCain needs big Republican turnout to compete with the expected big Democratic turnout. He can’t rely solely on antipathy toward Obama. He has to inspire his own base, and he can’t do that if his base finds Democratic drama is 25-30% more riveting than him winning the nomination. For a game-changing move in the numbers, McCain needs game-changing messaging.
If there is any comfort for McCain partisans out of the chart, maybe it’s that there’s still room for Obama to be defined in the minds of less-attentive Republicans (and independents, who generally track with Republicans by this measure), particularly if the Republican base is not yet tuned into "campaign news." Underground smears, though not officially owned by the campaign, will certainly be a part of it. Just the other day an otherwise sweet girl solemnly informed me that Obama was secretly only “8.25% black.” (Yes, that is one-12.1212121212th black, for those scoring at home.) But something tells me the dissatisfied public right track/wrong track mood is going to dwarf the traction of smears. If I were a Republican, I wouldn’t feel comfortable betting on the smears.
Perhaps the most significant lesson Pew's chart teaches us is that Kitchen Sink attacks and "controversy" depress "very close" attention across the board. Counterintuitively for those who voraciously consume political news and have an emotional investment in the outcome, just when it seems like everything is becoming Urgent with a capital U because of some particular story, that very well may be when the aggregate of millions are tuning out.
7.03.2008
Energy Gap: Following Campaign News "Very Closely"
by Sean Quinn @ 8:12 AM...see also controversy, enthusiasm, pew, right-track
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

35 comments
Nice piece, and glad to see you back, Sean. For a couple of days there I thought we had scared you off ;)
I looked the exit poll from Nevada in 2004.
Kerry lost by only 21.000 vote.
For me, it's impossible for Obama lose in Nevada with the big turnout.
Las Vegas and Clark County will be big this year.
http://us.cnn.com/ELECTION/2004/pages/results/states/NV/P/00/
http://us.cnn.com/ELECTION/2004/pages/results/states/NV/P/00/epolls.0.html
Maybe the Republican base is mainly excited about demonising and defeating the Democratic nominee, regardless of who runs for their own party? After all, one of the anti-Clinton narratives in the primary was that she would energise the right (against her) more effectively than the right could energise themselves...I don't know whether this hypothesis is at all true, but it's a defensible interpretation of the data you present.
In 2004, most voters I knew - including Republicans - were in the "anybody but Bush" camp. That dynamic may be playing out this year for the Repubs. It would have been the overwhelming dynamic with Clinton (for essentially no good reason), but will still play a big role..
The flip side to this should be of some concern to the Obama camp though. What does it say that despite a 54-28 advantage in enthusiasm we only see Obama leading by about five points?
If something, anything, happens to excite the Right - like a VP choice that will go over well or if Obama makes some blunder or if GOP interest groups successfully paint the unknown Obama as unpalatable - and the enthusiasm gap narrows it seems to me that Obama's numbers could look a lot less rosy in a big hurry.
Anon,
If McCain chooses Romney as his running mate (someone I didn't really like at all during the primary contest) he'll motivate the Mormons to come out in droves and that may well hold the state for the Republicans. From the exit polling of the NV Caucus on the GOP side, Mormons made up 21 percent of all Republicans that went to the polls - but they make up only seven percent of the population. Those folks CAN potentially become energized quickly. I'm not sure a Romney choice is worth it because I'm not convinced Romney will go over well in Ohio. He's not a natural fit for the state - but then again neither is Obama.
Echo that it's great to see you back, Senor Nines? Although, I would argue (perhaps, counterintuitively to you but according to my own understanding intuitively) that 'counterintuitively' (in your last paragraph) needs to be replaced by 'intuitively' - i.e. that intuition is an evolving faculty for an individual and that it feeds itself on whatever facts are currently available to said individual. So, if you learn something new, that is part of a your new current intuitiveness. Hopefully that's comprehensible.
The only energy gap that matters is the one at the gas pumps. Obama and the democrats are on the wrong side of drilling and nukes. The RNC is launching their first ad on this topic today.
Evangelicals got together yesterday and are determined to defeat Obama. Obama inspires a lot of energy. Unfortunately for him a lot of it is negative.
Sean,
I have to dispute your claim that the republican nomination was not of interest to republicans, and that it was the run up of the democrats to March 4 that was what caused their spike in interest. McCain clinched his party's nomination on March 4. Sure, everyone knew he was going to win before that, but on March 4 it was official.
For Democrats on June 6, there was a spike in interest on June 6, even though everyone knew the outcome already, Republicans surely were interested in watching it happen officially.
The data on I's is wildly confusing. If they are as uninterested as R's does than mean they will trend with the R's? I'd always assumed that I's would seek their own path requiring them to be more interested than the average. Is BHO's appeal to the I's overstated? Will their apparent apathy cause I's to stay home in droves on election day?
Interesting post.
Regarding the last paragraph, though, it seems to me that a simpler hypothesis is that interest drops when uncertainty in the outcome drops. Despite attempts by the Clinton campaign and much of the media to make the primary race seem close in March through May, the numbers dictated that it was very difficult for Clinton to overtake Obama. Now that we're looking toward the general, interest has picked up again.
I have to say, I'm surprised by that. It means most people are more politically savvy than I might have expected.
Ugh, yet another post from Sean. His absence recently has made me enjoy this blog again. But wild-eyed interpretation with little regard for data is back!
At least this time, he didn't throw in superfluous sexist comments.
Your comment, 'Chris', is a better example of 'wild-eyed interpretation with little regard for data'. I'll repeat I think Senor Nines is doing a good job (now that he is being more concise).
Some posts make me happy that comments on my blog are infrequent, moderated and generally not of the forum type ad hominem variety. Self righteously yours, S
PS. I agree with Sean's post and the welcome backs.
a stunningly original insight - factually supported.
can anyone continue to wonder why the blogiverse will replace traditional media feedback loops?
terrific. where is it you post about baseball again?
"Liberal media," eh? The so-called "liberal media," right?
What kind of smears are you talking about?
Are you even paying attention? Or are you drunk on hope and change?
Sean, let me be the first to congratulate you for introducing the word "gruntychucklish" to the internet, and possibly the English language.
The news interest index is interesting, especially because it is updated weekly. I suspect it can be used to come up with better weights for old polls; the higher the recent interest, the less old polls should be weighted.
Adjusting the weights in this manner should capture the shifts due to events like Clinton's concession without adopting a one-size-fits-all approach. I'd suggested something similar using Google Trends, but this might be even better.
Hey John Peterson:
The article you linked is so full of spin and hyperbole that I had a hard time reading the text before it amassed into a vortex and disappeared from my screen.
You may be interested to know the author of that article, being so disconnected from reality, wrote an article 2 weeks ago titled "Bush never lied to us about Iraq" - you can read it here:
James Kirchick is a journalism hack
So after you've pulled the spin from his article, take another look at all the McCain smears that came from his surrogates. How is it fair that Obama's surrogates are called to task for their smears and McCain's are not? That article has not one mention about Joe Lieberman or Charlie Black.
While I have never pledged to the RNC, I am a social conservative (Although I joined the Granholm Campaign in a mighty way hosting fund raisers through my firm and many other aspects, because of my belief that the Devos family is not good for politics in Michigan) I would say my interest peaked during the bloodbath of the Democratic primary. I enjoyed the snipers on both sides hitting each other. Destructive politics holds a big entertainment value. My interest will peak again this fall around Mid October when the numbers really matter. For now I have mild interest and enjoy the pundits and blowhards making insane predictions about a far from over campaign. Its entertainment value at this stage for me, not really politics. I like saying the outrageous or absurd and seeing the response. The response generally speaks louder than the statement.
Adam,
I don't think we should expect polling preferences to track with media interest. If anything, less interested people would be more inclined to simply vote for their side's candidate.
Higgly,
I think I agree. The Democratic primary was theater in a way the Republican was not. I think it's natural that interest in both would peak around the nastiest fighting. But sustained high interest on the D side does mean more volunteering/GOTV effort for Obama.
Judge Crater,
"The data on I's is wildly confusing. If they are as uninterested as R's does than mean they will trend with the R's? I'd always assumed that I's would seek their own path requiring them to be more interested than the average. Is BHO's appeal to the I's overstated? Will their apparent apathy cause I's to stay home in droves on election day?"
Scott Rasmussen (I think, my apologies if I'm misattributing here) made the observation that the increase in Democrats and decrease in Republicans in this election cycle aren't really Repubs becoming Dems. It's Independents becoming Dems and Repubs becoming Independents.
The result of this is that much of Obama's support among "independents" is now migrating to support among Democrats, and "Independents" as a group are more conservative/GOP-leaning than in the past, both because more conservatives/right-leaning moderates are identifying as Independents and because more left-leaning moderates are identifying as Democrats.
This would be consistent with the numbers here showing I's tracking with R's and, perhaps, with Obama's position among independents being weaker than suggested in earlier polls.
Higglytown and Alex: Although I would have expected it, I don't think the idea that interest peaked when the fighting was the nastiest matches the data shown. My recollection is there was some nastiness in January, and there is indeed an uptick then. But February was pretty mild; things got rough again in the second half of March and April. But interest falls dramatically then. I stand by the notion that it's uncertainty in the result that drove interest.
To check this idea, I looked at the Intrade charts showing the percentage chance of Clinton and Obama being the nominee. Clinton was at 70% in December, and except for an Iowa dip too brief to be caught by most polling, dropped only a little until SuperTuesday. For the rest of February, Clinton was dropping and Obama rising. By March, Obama was above 70% and bounced around from there until the end of the nomination process. McCain, incdientally, hit the 70%+ level right after Florida in late January.
Taking into account a bit of time lag for changes to sink in, it looks like the news interest graph correlates more strongly with competitive races than either nice (as Sean posits) or nasty (as Higglytown and Alex suggest) behavior from the campaigns.
Hey Anonymous Coward,
I know, "Bush lied, people died" is probably an article of faith for you, but Kirchick's article is basically right. Is everything you read that you don't agree with just "spin" and "smears"?
They were wrong about intelligence. But there were other reasons to invade Iraq, such as the country's repeated dodging of UN sanctions. You liberals like the UN, right?
It's 2002. Someone says: “As far as I’m concerned, there really is something to be said for occasionally putting diplomacy aside and laying one's cards on the table. There is value in calling evil by its name.” Recalling the Clinton administration’s fitful, feckless, and futile attempts to rein in the Iraqi dictator’s terror mongering and quest for weapons of mass destruction, [this person] described Iraq as “a virulent threat in a class by itself.” As war clouds hovered, he darkly rued the U.S. failure to remove Saddam in 1991, boldly insisting that this time “failure cannot be an option, which means that we must be prepared to go the limit.”
Who was it? Yea, Al Gore. That was, until "Bush lied, people died" and attack on the Bush administration at all costs (including defeat in Iraq) became the Democratic Party's platform.
If you read John McCain's account of his time as a POW in North Vietnam, you'll see how damaging American "peace" efforts and the constant attacks on the left on U.S. efforts were to the U.S. and how McCain's torturers used the words of supposedly well-intentioned Americans against them.
I'm glad you linked to that article, because of this paragraph:
"I no longer believe that it was necessary for us to get involved in South Vietnam to stop communist aggression in Southeast Asia," [Fmr. Michigan Gov. George] Romney elaborated in that infamous 1967 interview. That was an intellectually justifiable view then, just as it is intellectually justifiable for erstwhile Iraq war supporters to say -- given the way it's turned out -- that they don't think the effort has been worth it.
But just as it was necessary to intervene in Vietnam-- and though we fell short of more lofty goals, we prevented the communists from expanding further and further into Souheast Asia, as was their plan, it was necessary to intervene in Iraq.
That was a move largely supported at the time. As soon as it became politically expedient to do so, however, the Democratic Party and their liberal denizens began this simplistic nonsense campaign of "Bush lied, people died," and persist in it even as our current successes in Iraq are staggering (which they ignore). No doubt they embolden our enemies.
So where are the spin and the smears coming from again? I mean, what is called "smears" against Obama are mostly just factual things. Hey, look, Obama hangs out with this terrorist. Oh, hey, it looks like he went to this church for twenty years with this radical, America-damning preacher.
Whereas the left's smears are childish nonsense. McCain is probably going to smear Obama, and use people's racist fears. General BETRAY-us. (Clever!) McCain is probably psychologically scarred from his time in a POW camp. He's too old. Yawn. Wake me up when Jimmy Carter's-- I mean Barack Obama's-- presidency is over.
Tom: that's a reasonable explanation although some I's are refractory: they won't pledge membership to any party. I like your logic although is D party membership increasing that quickly? I know it's on an upward slope but the idea that it has swallowed up most of the D-inclined side of the I spectrum seems too convenient.
Judge Crater,
Rasmussen tracks party ID monthly (http://rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/mood_of_america/party_affiliation/party_affiliation/summary_of_party_affiliation)
They show the biggest increase in Dems in Jan-Feb, '08, with the numbers holding pretty steady since then, and ditto for the drop in Repubs.
Rasmussen's number shows the number of Repubs as comparable to at the time of the 2006 elections, which was their previous low point, but they show Democrats as being about 3% higher than at the time of the 2006 elections.
Comparing today with the time of the 2004 elections, Rasmussen shows about 3% more Democrats (41% v. 38%) and 6% fewer Republicans (31% v. 37%). If you assume that Repubs move to Ind, as opposed to Dem, and Dems gain from Ind, as opposed to Repub, that would suggest that just over 20% of current Independents called themselves Republicans in late 2004 and just over 10% of the folks who called themselves Independents in late 2004 are now calling themselves Democrats.
Hey, Obama could be 1/12.12 black; Stephen Colbert is 1/13 Chickasaw...
Tom: to go any deeper than that would require polling from the I's themselves. The Rasmussen data doesn't go back (at least on that site) to 2000 or even 1998 when I would have guessed that D's were becoming I's. The trend has reversed itself but to gauge the impact of the numbers you've generated on the I vote in the chart above requires a better understanding of the breakdown of R- versus D-leaning I's as a function of time. If R's have actively been becoming I's since 2002, R-leaning I's could already be the majority and your numbers (illuminating the flight of D-leaning I's back to D's) would simply cement that majority.
Of course, this speculates the absence of plain vanilla I's who can shift from R- to D-leaning as their level of personal disgust mounts.
Affaire Clark -love it Sean! So much classier than clark-gate or some other horrible derivative.
Hey John Peterson,
You want to call people "cowards", please do it elsewhere. This isn't that kind of site.
"Obama and the democrats are on the wrong side of drilling"
Which drilling is that? The coastal drilling that will take 10 years to get up and running (if they actually find something) or the ANWR drilling that will ultimately give us a grand total of 6 months of fuel in toto?
As is often the case, it'll take a lot of people stating facts repeatedly to get past all the disinformation the Republican side keeps tossing out there, hoping something will actually resonate.
"Anonymous Coward" is just a name that some sites give automatically to those who post anonymously. Nothing personal.
Nate, Republicans are interested in the Democratic primaries not because they actually like either Obama or Clinton. There was a huge spike in the Democratic primaries in March, but that was mostly, if not all, antipathy towards Obama. I'm not saying you're wrong, but for all we know, more Republican interest in the Democratic party could very well translate into more votes against Obama.
情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣用品,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,情趣,美國aneros,rudeboy,英國rudeboy,英國Rocksoff,德國Fun Factory,Fun Factory,英國甜筒造型按摩座,甜筒造型按摩座,英國Rock Chic ,瑞典 Lelo ,英國Emotional Bliss,英國 E.B,荷蘭 Natural Contours,荷蘭 N C,美國 OhMiBod,美國 OMB,Naughti Nano ,音樂按摩棒,ipod按摩棒,美國 The Screaming O,美國TSO,美國TOPCO,美國Doc Johnson,美國CA Exotic,美國CEN,美國Nasstoy,美國Tonguejoy,英國Je Joue,美國Pipe Dream,美國California Exotic,美國NassToys,美國Vibropod,美國Penthouse,仿真按摩棒,矽膠按摩棒,猛男倒模,真人倒模,仿真倒模,PJUR,Zestra,適趣液,穿戴套具,日本NPG,雙頭龍,FANCARNAL,日本NIPPORI,日本GEL,日本Aqua Style,美國WET,費洛蒙,費洛蒙香水,仿真名器,av女優,打炮,做愛,性愛,口交,吹喇叭,肛交,魔女訓練大師,無線跳蛋,有線跳蛋,震動棒,震動保險套,震動套,TOY-情趣用品,情趣用品網,情趣購物網,成人用品網,情趣用品討論,成人購物網,鎖精套,鎖精環,持久環,持久套,拉珠,逼真按摩棒,名器,超名器,逼真老二,電動自慰,自慰,打手槍,仿真女郎,SM道具,SM,性感內褲,仿真按摩棒,pornograph,hunter系列,h動畫,成人動畫,成人卡通,情色動畫,情色卡通,色情動畫,色情卡通,無修正,禁斷,人妻,極悪調教,姦淫,近親相姦,顏射,盜攝,偷拍,本土自拍,素人自拍,公園露出,街道露出,野外露出,誘姦,迷姦,輪姦,凌辱,痴漢,痴女,素人娘,中出,巨乳,調教,潮吹,av,a片,成人影片,成人影音,線上影片,成人光碟,成人無碼,成人dvd,情色影音,情色影片,情色dvd,情色光碟,航空版,薄碼,色情dvd,色情影音,色情光碟,線上A片,免費A片,A片下載,成人電影,色情電影,TOKYO HOT,SKY ANGEL,一本道,SOD,S1,ALICE JAPAN,皇冠系列,老虎系列,東京熱,亞熱,武士系列,新潮館,情趣用品,情趣,情趣商品,情趣網站,跳蛋,按摩棒,充氣娃娃,自慰套,G點,性感內衣,情趣內衣,角色扮演,生日禮物,生日精品,自慰,打手槍,潮吹,高潮,後庭,情色論譠,影片下載,遊戲下載,手機鈴聲,音樂下載,開獎號碼,統一發票號碼,夜市,統一發票對獎,保險套,做愛,減肥,美容,瘦身,當舖,軟體下載,汽車,機車,手機,來電答鈴,週年慶,美食,徵信社,網頁設計,網站設計,室內設計,靈異照片,同志,聊天室,運動彩券,大樂透,威力彩,搬家公司,除蟲,偷拍,自拍,無名破解,av女優,小說,民宿,大樂透開獎號碼,大樂透中獎號碼,威力彩開獎號碼,討論區,痴漢,懷孕,美女交友,交友,日本av,日本,機票,香水,股市,股市行情, 股市分析,租房子,成人影片,免費影片,醫學美容,免費算命,算命,姓名配對,姓名學,姓名學免費,遊戲,好玩遊戲,好玩遊戲區,線上遊戲,新遊戲,漫畫,線上漫畫,動畫,成人圖片,桌布,桌布下載,電視節目表,線上電視,線上a片,線上掃毒,線上翻譯,購物車,身分證製造機,身分證產生器,手機,二手車,中古車,法拍屋,歌詞,音樂,音樂網,火車,房屋,情趣用品,情趣,情趣商品,情趣網站,跳蛋,按摩棒,充氣娃娃,自慰套, G點,性感內衣,情趣內衣,角色扮演,生日禮物,精品,禮品,自慰,打手槍,潮吹,高潮,後庭,情色論譠,影片下載,遊戲下載,手機鈴聲,音樂下載,開獎號碼,統一發票,夜市,保險套,做愛,減肥,美容,瘦身,當舖,軟體下載,汽車,機車,手機,來電答鈴,週年慶,美食,徵信社,網頁設計,網站設計,室內設計,靈異照片,同志,聊天室,運動彩券,,大樂透,威力彩,搬家公司,除蟲,偷拍,自拍,無名破解, av女優,小說,民宿,大樂透開獎號碼,大樂透中獎號碼,威力彩開獎號碼,討論區,痴漢,懷孕,美女交友,交友,日本av ,日本,機票,香水,股市,股市行情,股市分析,租房子,成人影片,免費影片,醫學美容,免費算命,算命,姓名配對,姓名學,姓名學免費,遊戲,好玩遊戲,好玩遊戲區,線上遊戲,新遊戲,漫畫,線上漫畫,動畫,成人圖片,桌布,桌布下載,電視節目表,線上電視,線上a片,線上a片,線上翻譯,購物車,身分證製造機,身分證產生器,手機,二手車,中古車,法拍屋,歌詞,音樂,音樂網,借錢,房屋,街頭籃球,找工作,旅行社,六合彩,水噹噹,台中隆鼻,果凍隆乳,改運整型,自體脂肪移植,新娘造型,婚禮顧問,下川島,常平,常平,珠海,澳門機票,香港機票,貸款,貸款,信用貸款,宜蘭民宿,花蓮民宿,未婚聯誼,網路購物,婚友,婚友社,未婚聯誼,交友,婚友,婚友社,單身聯誼,未婚聯誼,未婚聯誼, 婚友社,婚友,婚友社,單身聯誼,婚友,未婚聯誼,婚友社,未婚聯誼,單身聯誼,單身聯誼,白蟻,白蟻,除蟲,老鼠,減肥,減肥,在家工作,在家工作,水噹噹,台中隆鼻,果凍隆乳,改運整型,自體脂肪移植,新娘造型,婚禮顧問,下川島,常平,常平,珠海,澳門機票,香港機票,貸款,貸款,信用貸款,宜蘭民宿,花蓮民宿,未婚聯誼,網路購物,婚友,婚友社,未婚聯誼,交友,婚友,婚友社,單身聯誼,未婚聯誼,未婚聯誼, 婚友社,婚友,婚友社,單身聯誼,婚友,未婚聯誼,婚友社,未婚聯誼,單身聯誼,單身聯誼,白蟻,白蟻,除蟲,老鼠,減肥,減肥,在家工作,在家工作,婚友,單身聯誼,未婚聯誼,婚友,交友,交友,婚友社,婚友社,婚友社,大陸新娘,大陸新娘,越南新娘,越南新娘,外籍新娘,外籍新娘,台中坐月子中心,搬家公司,搬家公司,中和搬家,台北搬家,板橋搬家,新店搬家,線上客服,網頁設計,線上客服,網頁設計,植牙,關鍵字,關鍵字,seo,seo,網路排名,自然排序,網路排名軟體,交友,越南新娘,婚友社,外籍新娘,大陸新娘,越南新娘,交友,外籍新娘,視訊聊天,大陸新娘,婚友社,婚友,越南新娘,大陸新娘,越南新娘,視訊交友,外籍新娘,網路排名,網路排名軟體,網站排名優化大師,關鍵字排名大師,網站排名seo大師,關鍵字行銷專家,關鍵字,seo,關鍵字行銷,網頁排序,網頁排名,關鍵字大師,seo大,自然排名,網站排序,網路行銷創業,汽車借款,汽車借錢,汽車貸款,汽車貸款,拉皮,抽脂,近視雷射,隆乳,隆鼻,變性,雙眼皮,眼袋,牙齒,下巴,植牙,人工植牙,植髮,雷射美容,膠原蛋白,皮膚科,醫學美容,玻尿酸,肉毒桿菌,微晶瓷,電波拉皮,脈衝光,關鍵字,關鍵字,seo,seo,網路排名,自然排序,網路排名軟體,英語演講,托福,Toastmaster,汽車借款,汽車借款,汽車借款,汽車貸款,汽車貸款,借錢,借貸,當舖,借款,借貸,借錢,週轉,
牙醫,植牙,假牙|矯正|牙周病,牙醫診所、植牙,紋身,刺青,創業,批發,TATTOO,皮膚科,痘痘,雷射、脈衝光、除斑,中醫,腫瘤,腎臟病,僵直性脊椎炎,飛梭雷射,肉毒桿菌,玻尿酸,痘痘,脈衝光,醫美,毛孔粗大,醫學美容,seo,關鍵字行銷,關鍵字、自然排序,網路行銷,關鍵字、自然排序,關鍵字行銷、seo,關鍵字廣告,網路行銷,seo,關鍵字行銷,關鍵字廣告,關鍵字,自然排序,部落格行銷,網路行銷,網路爆紅,牛舌餅,婚紗,台中婚紗,腫瘤,腎臟病。
艾葳酒店經紀公司提供專業的酒店經紀, 酒店上班小姐,八大行業,酒店兼職,傳播妹,或者想要到打工兼差、打工,兼差,或者八大行業,酒店兼職,想去酒店上班, 日式酒店,制服酒店,ktv酒店,禮服店,整天穿得水水漂漂的,還是想去制服店當上班小姐,水水們如果想要擁有打工工作、晚上兼差工作、兼差打工、假日兼職、兼職工作、酒店兼差、兼差、打工兼差、日領工作、晚上兼差工作、酒店工作、酒店上班、酒店打工、兼職、兼差、兼差工作、酒店上班等,想了解酒店相關工作和特種行業內容,想兼職工作日領、假日兼職、兼差打工、或晚班兼職想擁有快速賺錢又有保障的工作嗎???又可以現領請找專業又有保障的艾葳酒店經紀公司!
艾葳酒店經紀是合法的公司工作環境高雅時尚,無業績壓力,無脫秀無喝酒壓力,高層次會員制客源,工作輕鬆,可日領、現領。
一般的酒店經紀只會在水水們第一次上班和領薪水時出現而已,對水水們的上班安全一點保障都沒有!艾葳酒店經紀公司的水水們上班時全程媽咪作陪,不需擔心!只提供最優質的酒店上班,酒店上班,酒店打工環境、上班條件給水水們。心動嗎!? 趕快來填寫你的酒店上班履歷表
水水們妳有缺現領、有兼職、缺錢卡奴的煩腦嗎?想到日本留學缺錢嗎?妳是傳播妹??想要擁有高時薪又輕鬆的夜間兼職工作,打工機會和,假日打工,假日兼職賺錢的機會嗎??想實現夢想卻又缺錢沒錢嗎!??
艾葳酒店台北酒店經紀招兵買馬!!徵專業的酒店打工,想要去酒店的水水,想要短期日領,酒店日領,禮服酒店,制服店,酒店經紀,ktv酒店,便服店,酒店工作,禮服店,酒店小姐,酒店經紀人,
等相關服務 幫您快速的實現您的夢想~!!
酒店經紀人,
菲梵酒店經紀,
酒店經紀,
禮服酒店上班,
酒店小姐兼職,
便服酒店經紀,
酒店打工經紀,
制服酒店工作,
專業酒店經紀,
合法酒店經紀,
酒店暑假打工,
酒店寒假打工,
酒店經紀人,
菲梵酒店經紀,
酒店經紀,
禮服酒店上班,
酒店經紀人,
菲梵酒店經紀,
酒店經紀,
禮服酒店上班,
酒店小姐兼職,
便服酒店工作,
酒店打工經紀,
制服酒店經紀,
專業酒店經紀,
合法酒店經紀,
酒店暑假打工,
酒店寒假打工,
酒店經紀人,
菲梵酒店經紀,
酒店經紀,
禮服酒店上班,
酒店小姐兼職,
便服酒店工作,
酒店打工經紀,
制服酒店經紀,
酒店經紀,
菲
梵,
Post a Comment