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Title: Obama + Internet + Money = HOPE
Author: Kevin Doyle
Date: 20 May 2011
Language: en
Topics: Barack Obama, internet, elections, money, Irish Anarchist Review
Source: Retrieved on 22nd December 2021 from http://www.wsm.ie/c/obama-internet-money-hope
Notes: Published in the Irish Anarchist Review Issue 3.

Kevin Doyle

Obama + Internet + Money = HOPE

The electoral system in the United States is notoriously conservative.

Two political parties, the Republicans and the Democrats, dominate. To

be a Presidential hopeful, you need to have stacks of money – to pay for

advertising and campaign teams and so on and so forth. Usually this

means courting big business and corporate interests in return for

campaign donations.

As a former senator Obama was well aware of this situation and how

things worked. Ultimately, however, his success lay in the fact that he

mobilised in two distinct constituencies — among the business community

but also amongst the grassroots voters. This latter aspect – his

grassroots mobilisation — received considerable prominence because it

was ‘news’ and noteworthy. His clear and unambiguous business friendly

comments received less attention, but were nonetheless important.

Obama’s new methods of organising were obvious in two distinct areas –

in how he raised money but also in how he spread the word about his

campaign policies [1]. These new and dynamic methods further enhanced

the image of Obama as ‘being different’ and radical – this was

particularly important among the younger voter groups.

Internet

Obama used the internet to build his campaign, but crucially he did this

in ways that empowered and involved his target support base.

Obama had a big presence online from the outset. His campaign was

registered on all the main social media platforms like Facebook,

MySpace, YouTube and Twitter.

He had a very smart ‘online’ headquarters called MyBO at

my.barackobama.com. This was not just a static showcase: MyBO allowed

“users to create events, exchange information, raise funds, and connect

with voters in their area. MyBO was the digital home from which the

campaign could mobilise its army of supporters.” [2] It incorporated

over two million profiles during the campaign.

MyBO succeeded in creating a ‘sense of community as everyone with

political interest could participate. Via blogs, people could express

themselves and report about their personal experiences during the

campaign. Importantly the site was also used to organise more than

200,000 offline events during the campaign.’ [3]

The Obama campaign used traditional internet avenues like email. It

accumulated 13 million email addresses and sent one billion emails to

mobilise supporters. Emails were used to make contact with ‘supporters,

bloggers, and online media’. [4]

Obama made massive use of texting. “A million people signed up for

Obama’s text-messaging program ... On Election Day, every voter who’d

signed up for alerts in battleground states got at least three text

messages. Supporters on average received five to 20 text messages per

month, depending on where they lived — the program was divided by

states, regions, zip codes and colleges — and what kind of messages they

had opted to receive.” [5]

Obama’s own blog was the centre where all news and information was

displayed. “It was the hub that captured all activities in the

Obamaverse and shared them with the world. The blog was the campaign’s

repository, a place where stories, videos, news, and pictures were

captured and pushed out to Obama’s many social network profiles.”

Dollars

In terms of fundraising Obama made a lot of capital (no pun intended)

from the fact that he was more citizen-funded than his opponents. This

touched on a sore point with a lot of voters in the USA who see the

system of candidate funding as being in the pocket of ‘big business’. So

many citizens donated small amounts of money and this was both popular

and a big campaign plus.

“3 million donors made a total of 6.5 million donations online adding up

to more than $500 million. Of those 6.5 million donations, 6 million

were in increments of $100 or less. The average online donation was $80,

and the average Obama donor gave more than once.” [6]

However Obama also got plenty of money from big business. Analysis shows

that only a quarter of Obama’s donations actually fell into the ‘small’

category (less than $200). To get around the matter of limits to

campaign donations, Obama set up with the Democratic National Committee,

the Obama Victory Fund. The maximum individual donation to this fund was

set at $28,500. However this was deemed to be quite limiting and a

second pro-Obama organisation, the Committee for Change, was created

which allowed individual donors to give up to $65,500. [7] As you can

well imagine, people who give these sorts of donations are not exactly

from the poor side of town.

Victory

In the final analysis, the crunch outcome for Obama’s innovative

mobilisation was as follows:

Obama benefited from a big increase in voter turnout – in other words he

succeeded in convincing apathetic voters that this time around they

could make a difference.

He also succeeded in ‘changing the minds of already mobilized voters’.

[8]

[1]

pep-net.eu

[2] Rahaf Harfoush. Yes We Did. An inside Look at how Social Media built

the Obama Brand. New Riders: Berkeley, 2009.

[3] ibid.

[4] ibid..

[5]

voices.washingtonpost.com

[6] ibid.

[7] ibid

[8] Voter Mobilization and the Obama Victory. Tracy Osborn. University

of Iowa