Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Context on Battleground Spending

Let me start here. Talking Points Memo is, hands down, as good as it gets in political blogging/reporting. They are the gold standard. But last night, Greg Sargent at TPM's Election Central reported that John McCain was outspending Barack Obama in battleground states under this headline:

McCain Outspending Obama By Hundreds of Thousands in Many Core Battleground States
Subsequently, Jonathan Martin at Politico picked up on the reporting, and given how many read TPM each day I'd expect to see more sources discuss the story today and tomorrow, at least to the extent VP talk does not crowd out everything else.

What's wrong with this story's framing?

What's wrong is that when I read those headlines, I get the impression that McCain is massively outspending Obama in the core battleground states. No context is presented. While at least Martin has "On TV" in his headline, there isn't a single mention on either TPM or in the Politico blurb contextualizing that spending in a state is not just advertising.

Readers here know that Barack Obama is dwarfing John McCain's ground operation; we've written about it repeatedly. Those thousands of paid organizers are not working for free. The field offices and the phone lines and the Blackberries and the reimbursed travel miles are not free. Moreover, Barack Obama pays his organizers out of the Campaign for Change, which is funded by Obama's own campaign; McCain's are mostly paid by the coordinated committees which in turn are funded by the RNC, RNSC and RNCC, further impacting the way spending numbers are attributed to each campaign.

While millions may be spent on advertising, so too is one campaign spending millions on ground game while the other is spending virtually nothing. Obama is investing more massively than any campaign in the history of American politics on the ground game. McCain is essentially not investing in ground. His early summer numbers of 20,000 phone calls nationwide for a whole month would be those of a single, low-budget House campaign. That's the equivalent of one person working ten hours a day for a month. For the entire nation. It's basically the equivalent of zero contacts. When Martin writes that McCain's ground campaign is revving up, it's essentially starting from nothing and is now in 1st gear.

Further, the idea that McCain's spending is disproportionately concentrated in television advertising in battleground states needs the context that he's simply not spending it anywhere else. While we don't have enough hard numbers to compose a fancy pie chart, rest assured that McCain's would show a much, much higher percentage of his pie on television ads whereas Obama's would show an unprecedentedly large slice on his thousands of paid organizers and hundreds of field offices.

As the story hits the discussion slipstream, hopefully it will not be framed as "hey, look at this surprising development, the guy with more money is being outspent because he's foolishly and riskily airing TV ads in lesser battlegrounds." Sure, Obama is spending plenty on ads, and he is spending advertising dollars more broadly (and thinly) than is McCain. But people are also failing to appreciate of dollars spent on the dramatic all-in move that Obama has made in organizing and neighbor-to-neighbor persuasion.

155 comments

David said...

MSM will fail us once more ... there should be laws against what they do to the public.

Dash Riprock said...

I think this is a very important point. It may also be hidden in polling. Any "likely voter" models are probably not accurate. They aren't accounting for massive turnout of Obama's voters by a well organized machine.

In 2004, Kerry lost because of voter turnout in Ohio and shenanigans by Ken Blackwell. If Kerry had the ground game of Obama, he would be running for re-election.

TV advertising might affect polling in a general sense, but there are many opportunities for Obama that are under the radar in places like Ohio. The same day registration and voting for instance. The voter purge in Colorado is very troubling and may be a case where Republicans can counter by cheating -- which is their forte.

jcmusic said...

BO's strategy seems pretty simple. Develop a huge ground game early. This is to ensure greater turnout on Nov 11.

Then, go huge with TV ads after the conventions.

I will bet my left arm that BO will blanket McCain in battleground states in September, Oct. and Nov.

I also suspect that BO will go very negative and when he goes positive, it will be with key policy issues.

Right now, BO's team is just in "lay the groundwork" "build the image" mode. Of course, because negative influences more than positive, McCain has picked up a few points with his negative ads vs. BO's personal introduction campaign.

But all in due time. All in due time.

eugene said...

TPM is very good, Josh Marshall is good, Eric Kleefield is good. But Greg Sargent is not all that bright, and it consistently shows in his editorial decisions. It's really too bad that he has such a prominent position at an otherwise great political news resource.

yiannis said...

Why don't you email him about this?

Darren said...

Why not let people think Obama is being outspent? Build up Republican confidence and surprise them with GOTV on Election Day. Or at least surprise the media. The threat would also inspire Obama's donors to give again.

However, I have to question the assumption that Obama is vastly outspending McCain on the ground. Nate pointed out that the national committees and state parties provide much of the Republican spending so even if we knew McCain's spending it wouldn't be comparable. Previous elections show that Republicans do invest heavily in canvassing and GOTV. No reason to think they aren't this year. Perhaps they simply talk about it less than Obama's campaign. That may well be the real surprise.

Kathryn said...

From Iowa here, and experiencing cognitive dissonance when reading pieces like TPM's. The ratio of Obama:McCain bumperstickers, yardsigns, T-shirts, etc is like 50:1. This is in the Des Moines metro area and heavily Repub central and northwest IA. Obama's GOTV effort is ubiquitous at public events. McCain is playing Iowa the way Hillary did before the caucuses: lots of paid adverts, relatively little real voter contact. Didn't work for Hill, how will it play out for McCain?

Darren said...

BO's strategy seems pretty simple. Develop a huge ground game early. This is to ensure greater turnout on Nov 11.

Republican strategist: Hey, let's tell Obama the election is on November 11th.

Another strategist: He's such a rube, he'll believe us. Just don't let him see the newspaper for a few months.

I guess it worked!

Sean said...

I want to be clear - the point isn't to call out Greg Sargent or TPM. The respect I have for those guys is large, large, large. And earned over a long time. They cover so many stories that this is an easy thing to happen.

I wrote it because if TPM can do it, anyone can do it - and because I have heard this kind of discussion on cable political shows frequently. But more significantly, this organizing story is being underwritten and under contextualized.

PeteKent said...

Ground game is a waste of money right now. Obama thinks he is still organizing for caucuses.

TV ads and free media are what are moving this election. It is doubtful that it will be won on the margins. The contrasts are too great between these candidates and people don't need some kid in Birkenstocks trying to convince them how to vote at this stage.

Ya gotta have a vote to get it out!

Obama is running a vapid issueless campaign and has essentially decided the best way to win is to stand for nothing except for higher taxes on the rich and an unrestricted right to abortion and not giving medical care to babies born from bungled abortions. On issue after issue he is becoming McCain light (Iraq, Georgia)

He is not for drilling or any other energy measure except those that are unproven. He wants to raise taxes (on whom is a constantly moving target and he cannot be trusted not to pick your pocket). As Saddleback shows he has limited appeal to value-based voters and will be rejected by them in Kerry like numbers.

He has allowed the Republicans to write his biography and they are only in the infancy of that. By the time they are through, Kerry will look like a Patriot.

Having all these people on the ground is expensive and hard to discipline. Each field office is laden with potential gaffe producing staff members who will only be very remotely controlled by the national campaign. People are expensive. There is an old adage in business: things are cheaper (and more reliable) than people.

It is a recipe for disaster.

Worse Obama is not really raising much money. His financial advantage will be small relatively speaking and he needs the $$$ to get his message out.

Once he decides what that message is.

Not being Bush doesn’t seem to be working. McCain is outpolling Bush by 15%.

Bryan said...

This is to ensure greater turnout on Nov 11.

Unfortunately, Obama's vaunted ground game won't win the election for him on that day.

However, I have to question the assumption that Obama is vastly outspending McCain on the ground. Nate pointed out that the national committees and state parties provide much of the Republican spending so even if we knew McCain's spending it wouldn't be comparable. Previous elections show that Republicans do invest heavily in canvassing and GOTV. No reason to think they aren't this year. Perhaps they simply talk about it less than Obama's campaign. That may well be the real surprise.

The amount of campaign offices in use is usually a strong sign of a campaign's ground-game investment in a state. By that metric, the only battleground state McCain is out-investing Obama in is Florida. (McCain also has one office open to Obama's none in each of NJ, WV, CA, and AZ.)

BlackCoffeeDrinkingLiberal said...

What's the most realistic way to count spending? The things I can think of are:

- candidate
- national committee
- each state committee
- 527s

This doesn't include free press (not saying who benefits) from lengthy discussions of "did he steal the cross in the sand story" or "who does the press really love?"

On a separate note, here's some anecdotal evidence. I was in Manchester, NH, on election day in 2004. Dems (including me) were visible all over the place -- Kerry's Manchester HQ was a zoo; Repubs were basically invisible, apparently only driving their voters to the poll. Kerry lost that county 51.0 to 48.2 (99,724 to 94,121 to 1,582), results from uselectionatlas.org.

jcmusic said...

Nov. 4th. My bad.

Hitler's moto: "Lie to people loud enough and long enough and they'll believe you".

Pete Kent seems to own this strategy. Preaches everyday as though he is trying to convince himself while he convinces others.

"Not being Bush doesn’t seem to be working. McCain is outpolling Bush by 15%." --- this is not a good thing. To out poll the lowest rating of any sitting president in US history. Unless McCain gets that to over 25%, he'll lose.

But keep lying. You might get a few converts along the way.

LAT said...

Sean--I am usually a lurker here but I am glad to see you posting on this. I