THE CENTER IS BACK!

THE CENTER IS BACK!

The center is not gone as many said. The center is back. I refer to the center of preferences in American Politics. A new survey by NBC-Esquire shows that 

“…there is a large group of American voters—even a majority—who make up a New American Center that is passionate, persuadable, and very real. They are merely waiting for Washington to find them.”

The link contains incredible “findings”. For example: “THE CENTER IS PRETTY WHITE. NOT AS WHITE AS THE FOLKS ALL THE WAY TO THE RIGHT, BUT STILL: PRETTY WHITE. AND THEY DON’T WANT TO HEAR ANY TALK OF “DIVERSITY.””

WOW! There are many other findings that will be useful for those planning their campaigns memos focusing on how to attract “the center” or those who are undecided. There is information that we can use for our messages and media strategy too.

Love and Politics

Love and Politics

Propaganda re-visited. This article would be more relevant when we discussed Bernays’ Propaganda book, however, it is still interesting to read. 

New York Times contributing Op-Ed writer Stanley Fish discusses a new book by Martha Nussbaum “Political Emotions: Why Love Matters for Justice”. 

In the hard times when “Democrats think that Republicans are bigoted know-nothings who serve only Mammon, and Republicans think that Democrats are bent on destroying the freedoms in whose name the American revolution was fought” all we need, according to Martha Nassbaum is just a little bit of love.

Martha believes there is a way to transfer a group of self-driven individuals into a  society in which  “public emotions” operate to enlarge the individual’s “circle of concern”. 

The most interesting part here is who might be responsible for spreading the “virus” of love and humanity in the society. The answer is – government! Through the rhetoric of political leaders  and “by state-sponsoring and -financing of artifacts and entertainments that promote the desired political emotions: “public artworks, monuments and parks … festivals and celebrations … songs, symbols, official films and photographs” and even sporting events”.

I guess we’re talking propaganda with  a positive connotation here. It will be interesting to read the book itself, of course, to see whether it is as optimistically naive as it sounds. 

 

Maybe it’s our perception and not the facts…

Maybe it’s our perception and not the facts…

Overall, media coverage of Obama and Romney was actually fair and balanced.”

Well, this is an interesting finding from a study about the coverage of the election by political science professor John Sides, and one of the people behind the blog Monkey Cage,  Lynn Vavreck. 

They  explain:

“(…) when we looked at the average across the entire fall campaign (and the same was true in the summer), we found that the tone of the coverage of the two candidates was almost exactly the same.  Neither was covered much more positively or negatively than the other.  This is consistent with the Project for Excellence in Journalism’s research and with scholarly research on previous presidential elections.”

This is good news for Americans, who tend to distrust media, because they consider it to be unfair and unbalanced. They have more interesting findings, which will be in an upcoming book. Here is a summary of these findings (for an explanation about each one of them, check the link).

1. In the Republican presidential primary, news coverage drove the candidates’ surges in the polls. 

2. In the primary, news coverage helped end these surges as well.

3. In the general election campaign, it was the other way around: the polls drove the news.

4. Overall, media coverage of Obama and Romney was actually fair and balanced.  No, really.

5. The news media are more prone to “root for the story” than “root for the candidate.”

 

 

Campaign Handbook

Browsing the web, I happened to find a very interesting website on how to run campaigns (with a specific focus on Europe).

The name of the website is “Campaign Handbook” and I believe it is a very useful “formalization” on how to run a campaign.

The campaign handbook is an online guide to successful political campaigning. Its authors are mainly Green Party campaigners and activists from a range of countries across Europe, each with a different background, all with valuable experience to share.

The Green European Foundation’s handbook is a work in progress: your contributions, comments and ideas will help to develop this site further. If you have any examples of best or worst practice, fill in the ‘contribute’ form, attaching your text, photos and videos.

The first part of the handbook, a comprehensive theoretical guide to campaigning strategies and techniques, is divided into three sections: Campaign PreparationRunning the Campaignand After the Campaign. This theory is complemented by a second part, which includes examples of Best Practice from various political campaigns at all levels – local, regional, national and European. These case studies offer concrete tales, suggestions, tips and advice that can inform and steer your future work as campaigners and volunteers.

Setting up a campaign handbook was part of the original working programme of the Green European Foundation. The online platform aims to make available to everyone the experiences acquired during the training events organised by the Green European Foundation over the past years. Participation in politics is not only about knowing content, it is also about learning the necessary practical skills to be heard. This was the starting point for the idea behind the campaign handbook, which then took shape during regular discussions with activists and Green campaigners. The result is this online project: a practical campaigning manual and a platform for the exchange of knowledge and experiences.

If you go to the website, you will certainly find many useful tools, some more general (that can, therefore, be used in any campaign setting) and other more specific, that concentrate on the Green movement and specific geographical areas.

Anyhow, I found some very interesting suggestions that I cannot wait to put to practice, especially on fundraising, and I really believe you should take a look if you are planning to run campaigns in the future.

 

Framing House Republicans

President Obama is working hard to win media campaign against House Republicans about budget, government shut down, debt-ceiling and all that. Look at the ways he is trying to frame them as irresponsible, unreasonable and out of touch with reality:

“If you’re in negotiations around buying somebody’s house, you don’t get to say, well, let’s talk about the price I’m going to pay, and if you don’t give the price then I’m going to burn down your house.”

“They basically said, you know what? The president’s so responsible that if we just hold our breath and say we’re going to threaten default, then he’ll give us what we want, and we won’t have to give anything in return.”

Many more framing examples here:

http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_slatest/2013/10/08/obama_s_shutdown_analogies_a_complete_list_of_the_analogies_president_obama.html?wpsrc=upworthy

Rich Care Less

I found this article in the New York Times very interesting considering the reading material for this week. When the social distance is so much between those who have and those who have nothing, framing social issues so they harmonize with the values of the powerful is indeed very hard. The main point is that when the rich have so little empathy for others then talking about finding ways to close the economic gap will not work. We have to close the empathy gap first.

 

 

Original link: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/10/05/rich-people-just-care-less/?src=me&_r=0

OCTOBER 5, 2013, 2:25 PM

Rich People Just Care Less

By DANIEL GOLEMAN

Turning a blind eye. Giving someone the cold shoulder. Looking down on people. Seeing right through them.

These metaphors for condescending or dismissive behavior are more than just descriptive. They suggest, to a surprisingly accurate extent, the social distance between those with greater power and those with less — a distance that goes beyond the realm of interpersonal interactions and may exacerbate the soaring inequality in the United States.

A growing body of recent research shows that people with the most social power pay scant attention to those with little such power. This tuning out has been observed, for instance, with strangers in a mere five-minute get-acquainted session, where the more powerful person shows fewer signals of paying attention, like nodding or laughing. Higher-status people are also more likely to express disregard, through facial expressions, and are more likely to take over the conversation and interrupt or look past the other speaker.

Bringing the micropolitics of interpersonal attention to the understanding of social power, researchers are suggesting, has implications for public policy.

Of course, in any society, social power is relative; any of us may be higher or lower in a given interaction, and the research shows the effect still prevails. Though the more powerful pay less attention to us than we do to them, in other situations we are relatively higher on the totem pole of status — and we, too, tend to pay less attention to those a rung or two down.

A prerequisite to empathy is simply paying attention to the person in pain. In 2008, social psychologists from the University of Amsterdam and the University of California, Berkeley, studied pairs of strangers telling one another about difficulties they had been through, like a divorce or death of a loved one. The researchers found that the differential expressed itself in the playing down of suffering. The more powerful were less compassionate toward the hardships described by the less powerful.

Dacher Keltner, a professor of psychology at Berkeley, and Michael W. Kraus, an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, have done much of the research on social power and the attention deficit.

Mr. Keltner suggests that, in general, we focus the most on those we value most. While the wealthy can hire help, those with few material assets are more likely to value their social assets: like the neighbor who will keep an eye on your child from the time she gets home from school until the time you get home from work. The financial difference ends up creating a behavioral difference. Poor people are better attuned to interpersonal relations — with those of the same strata, and the more powerful — than the rich are, because they have to be.

While Mr. Keltner’s research finds that the poor, compared with the wealthy, have keenly attuned interpersonal attention in all directions, in general, those with the most power in society seem to pay particularly little attention to those with the least power. To be sure, high-status people do attend to those of equal rank — but not as well as those low of status do.

This has profound implications for societal behavior and government policy. Tuning in to the needs and feelings of another person is a prerequisite to empathy, which in turn can lead to understanding, concern and, if the circumstances are right, compassionate action.

In politics, readily dismissing inconvenient people can easily extend to dismissing inconvenient truths about them. The insistence by some House Republicans in Congress on cutting financing for food stamps and impeding the implementation of Obamacare, which would allow patients, including those with pre-existing health conditions, to obtain and pay for insurance coverage, may stem in part from the empathy gap. As political scientists have noted, redistricting and gerrymandering have led to the creation of more and more safe districts, in which elected officials don’t even have to encounter many voters from the rival party, much less empathize with them.

Social distance makes it all the easier to focus on small differences between groups and to put a negative spin on the ways of others and a positive spin on our own.

Freud called this “the narcissism of minor differences,” a theme repeated by Vamik D. Volkan, an emeritus professor of psychiatry at the University of Virginia, who was born in Cyprus to Turkish parents. Dr. Volkan remembers hearing as a small boy awful things about the hated Greek Cypriots — who, he points out, actually share many similarities with Turkish Cypriots. Yet for decades their modest-size island has been politically divided, which exacerbates the problem by letting prejudicial myths flourish.

In contrast, extensive interpersonal contact counteracts biases by letting people from hostile groups get to know one another as individuals and even friends. Thomas F. Pettigrew, a research professor of social psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, analyzed more than 500 studies on intergroup contact. Mr. Pettigrew, who was born in Virginia in 1931 and lived there until going to Harvard for graduate school, told me in an e-mail that it was the “the rampant racism in the Virginia of my childhood” that led him to study prejudice.

In his research, he found that even in areas where ethnic groups were in conflict and viewed one another through lenses of negative stereotypes, individuals who had close friends within the other group exhibited little or no such prejudice. They seemed to realize the many ways those demonized “others” were “just like me.” Whether such friendly social contact would overcome the divide between those with more and less social and economic power was not studied, but I suspect it would help.

Since the 1970s, the gap between the rich and everyone else has skyrocketed. Income inequality is at its highest level in a century. This widening gulf between the haves and have-less troubles me, but not for the obvious reasons. Apart from the financial inequities, I fear the expansion of an entirely different gap, caused by the inability to see oneself in a less advantaged person’s shoes. Reducing the economic gap may be impossible without also addressing the gap in empathy.

Daniel Goleman, a psychologist, is the author of “Emotional Intelligence” and, most recently, “Focus: The Hidden Driver of Excellence.”

Why Americans are addicted to Fox News

Why Americans are addicted to Fox News

Although the title of the article is overtly misleading (the Fox News audience is a little bit more than 1 million compared to the more than 300 americans), it offers insight of why polarized media is more popular than more “objective” or “unbiased” media. The center of the article is a study that concludes that watching outrage-programs provides a sense of belonging to a community. Work on media consumption and political preferences has showed in the past that people watch polarized news because it reaffirms their own opinions.

 

Ads from every US presidential election

Living Room Candidate offers all most noteworthy ads from every US presidential campaign. These videos offer insight in how TV ads have developed over time and gives us ideas what works and what does not, since we know who won each election. This is a gold mine for both historians, and aspiring election campaign managers.

TV ads were used for the first time in 1952 when WW2 hero Republican Dwight “Ike” Eisenhower ran against Democratic candidate Illinois Governor Adlai Stevenson. Keep in mind that back than TV’s were huge boxes with small screens. Ads had to be simple and the sound was even more important than it is now. That is why the most successful of the ads back than has this positive catchy tune.


Happy and catchy tunes have been used ever since and another successful example was Kennedy jingle in 1960 election.

However there is much more to election ads than music. Major theme used in US election campaigns is discrediting opponent by accusing him of flip-flopping – changing his opinion too often on too many occasions. One of the most successful ads accusing opponent of flip-flopping has been 2004 Bush vs Kerry election ad Windsurfing.


Another type of ads especially compelling during the Cold War were ads using fear. The Bear ad from 1984 Reagan vs Mondale election is one of the most effective ones.


These are just a couple of noteworthy ads covering some types of ads used in election campaigns. The Living Room Candidate offers much more, be sure to check it out!

Shutdowns of the past

Since the governmental shutdown is now official here is an interesting article from the Washington Post about all 17 shutdowns of the past. Last time it went on for 21 days!

 

Who do you think will come out as the winner and what do you think of this stragedy of the Republicans in the House?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/09/25/here-is-every-previous-government-shutdown-why-they-happened-and-how-they-ended/?tid=pm_business_pop

Clinton Aid Gets Ahead of Himself, Ted Cruz reads the Senate ‘Green Eggs and Ham’

http://www.newrepublic.com/article/114790/how-doug-band-drove-wedge-through-clinton-dynasty

In this long-winded and controversial New Republic article, former Clinton aide Doug Band is portrayed to be a self-serving social climber who used his Clinton connections to start his own business. Despite claiming to have not read the article himself, the press generated by its release led Clinton to issue a statement defending Band, as reported by CBS News:

“He was making a transition. He was starting a business. There’s nothing wrong with him starting a business with people he met working for me. That’s the only way he could have ever met people he could do business with. He went to work for me when he was in his early 20s and still a law student.”

In other news, freshman Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas), read Dr. Suess’ Green Eggs and Ham to the Senate this week in an attempt to ‘filibuster’ a discussion concerning the vote on the impending government shutdown, and to suppossedly stop Obamacare from going into effect. Delusional at best, it leaves me to wonder if things wouldn’t be better settled if we had knock-down drag out brawls on the Congressional floor like they do in Ukraine.

Dr. Seuss Goes To Washington