Posted: 04 Jul 2015 06:30 AM PDT
HOW I LEARNED GRASSROOTS
CAMPAIGNS FROM THE MASTER
Every Fourth of July, I think
about my former boss, Congressman Jim Jontz. Jim taught me the importance of
grassroots campaigns, real conversations, and knocking on doors. Jim was a
congressman from Indiana’s 5th district and a progressive legend. In his first
campaign, he won a state representative seat by 4 votes. He went on to win a
state Senate seat by less than 100 hundred votes and three congressional
elections by less than four thousand votes total.
I, along with many future campaign
operatives, got my start in politics by doing field work for Jim Jontz in a
rural Indiana district. There, I spent six months of my life organizing
volunteers and knocking on doors.
On the Fourth of July in 1990, Jim
set what I believe to be the world record for the most Fourth of July parades
attended in one congressional district by a candidate. Jim went to nine
different parades that day, with six of them all beginning at 2 p.m. In
addition to his door-to-door canvassing, Jim was famous for riding a bike in
parades. I remember that he was lectured at a parade in Rochester, Indiana
one year about staying in parade formation. He had started the parade as
float number 24, but by time he was done, he was float number 5, right
between the Ladies Auxiliary and some overly enthusiastic Shriners.
For the Fourth of July in 1990, we
had four bikes strapped to different cars in preparation for the nine
parades. Jim would fly to each parade on a prop plane and land at “airports”,
which were often just strips of grass. He would then then drive or walk to
the parade route and hop on the bike to be in the parade. There, we would
have volunteers handing out literature and trying and keep up with Jim, but
they never could.
At each parade, Jim would meet
with everyone, shake hands, and leave the bike at the end of the route. After
each parade, I would strap his abandoned bike to my car and take it to the
next parade. The parades in Logansport, Peru, Chili, Twelve Mile, and
Rochester were all in my area that day, but the second to last parade of the
day was in Crown Point. I drove to that parade even though it was not in my
area. It was a haul and the parade was spread out over a really long route,
mostly uphill. During the parade, the chain on the bike broke and I convinced
someone to lend Jim his bike to finish the parade. He was rewarded with
shirts. It was a very cool day.
Although the parades were fun and
there were a ton of other parades and county fairs, door-to-door canvassing
was my primary job.
The door-to-door program was less
sophisticated than today’s programs but it was way ahead of its time. Real,
unscripted conversations happened with voters on a daily basis. Canvassers
were trained to talk about a wide rage of topics, and engagement happened in
a genuine and real way.
Jim’s campaign utilized this
door-to-door strategy across a massive district that went from Kokomo to
Gary, with four full-time organizers and a dedicated group of volunteers.
Television and direct mail were important, but the real relationships Jim had
built at the door were what kept him ahead of the competition.
What I learned from Jim’s
door-to-door strategy, and from his campaign style in general, is that real
relationships matter and no matter how hard the fight, genuine interactions
will pay off. Jim was a master at connecting with people. He had a way of
knowing how to reach someone and what to say.
Jim also never took himself too
seriously. The first time I met him he was raising money by letting folks
throw sponges at him. He was open to any conversation, a bbq, a photo, a
handshake, or a joke. Regardless of where it was, Jim could make a connection
with you. Party did not matter. Democrat, Independent, Republican, he was
there for you.
Jim died of colon cancer in 2003.
But his legacy lives on in the lives he touched, the legislation he
championed, and the people he taught. We miss you Jim.
Joe Fuld is President of The
Campaign Workshop, a political and advocacy advertising agency in Washington
D.C. that provides strategy, digital advertising, direct mail and training
services to nonprofit and political clients. Joe also writes about politics,
advocacy and engagement strategies on the The Campaign Workshop Blog.
The Campaign Workshop
1660 L Street, NW Suite 506 Washington, DC 20036 (202)223-8884 info@thecampaignworkshop.com
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Monday, July 6, 2015
A Class Act. Can your Campaign do this?
Hope everyone had a great 4th of July. And did not eat too many hot dogs. Remember, you are always in campaign mode, even if filing has not opened. People are watching you. Here is a great campaign story about a classy candidate who really walked, er, rode, the talk. Lifted from the pages of Down Ticket Dems, via The Campaign Workshop:
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