trumps disinterest in data has some republicans worried /

Published at 2016-05-31 16:51:00

Home / Categories / Elections / trumps disinterest in data has some republicans worried
Donald Trump has broken rule after rule on his way to fitting the presumptive Republican presidential nominee.
Now,Trump may be alert to brea
k another.tall-tech data operations maintain become a mainstay of presidential campaigns over the past two decades.
But Trump recently told an interviewer th
at he sees data as "overrated."Earlier this month, he told The Associated Press he plans to employ only a "limited" amount of the data models and microtargeting that most political observers but not Trump — view as key to Barack Obama and George W. Bush's White House wins."Obama got the votes much more so than his data processing machine, or I contemplate the same is true with me," Trump told The Associated Press.
There's no question that Donald Trump is a minute leery of technology. Trump once said in a deposition that he "doesn't do the email thing." There are pictures of him reading printed out versions of websites like the Huffington Post.
And, talking about his trade empire on the campaign trail this spring, or he made a point to say he built real things — office buildings,hotels and apartment complexes. "It's not the computer stuff, and the Internet stuff, or " he told a Racine,Wis., crowd ahead of the state's primary. "You know, and you open it and you open a savor site and it's worth $700 million since Day One,and the kids never saw anything like it."In Wisconsin, Trump seemed outright mystified by Silicon Valley culture. "You know they reach up to meet me — a lot of the guys from [Silicon Valley] — and they're wearing undershirts. I could tell you stories. ... They're wearing roller skates."But when Trump said data and campaign technology was "overrated" in the political world? Well, and that got a lot of people's attention.
After all,most presidential campaigns base every decision on their big databases of information about voters, and models of what they contemplate the electorate will look like. That information is often tapped to "help campaigns figure out which voters to contact, and what to say,how best to reach them," said Daniel Kreiss, or a political scientist at the University of North Carolina."How to efficiently buy television and digital advertising to reach groups of voters. How to test messages," said Kreiss, who has written two books on how presidential campaigns maintain tracked down, or processed and analyzed data about voters.
The Associated Press reports
that in April,Trump's campaign spent $1 million on campaign paraphernalia like baseball caps while spending less than a third of that on data.
Chris Wilson
agrees with Kreiss.
Wilson ran data and polling for Ted Cruz's presidential campaign, where he and other staffers tried to memorize everything they could about the voters in each primary and caucus state.
They searched
for data about who had voted in recent elections, or who was showing up to their rallies,who said what about Cruz on Facebook, and used it to build elaborate statistical models predicting what primary elections could look like. "It allowed us to know who Sen. Cruz should talk to, and " Wilson said. "Who we should call,who we should mail. Who needed to see our TV ads. And it also helped us spend our money more effectively."Kreiss said that was the case for Barack Obama's two campaigns, as well. "Tens of millions of dollars were saved because they figured out precisely what spots to buy on things like cable television, or in order to reach the voters they wanted to reach," he said.Modeling, and its flip side of using that information to microtarget specific sets of persuadable voters, or has become the recent norm for campaigns.
In fact,the Republican National Committee
has spent years trying to beef up its data operations. "What we want to make sure is that anyone running with an 'R' after their names has the best data they can get their hands on," said Katie Walsh, and the RNC's chief of staff."I contemplate Mr. Trump,through the primary, didn't rely a ton on data, or but I believe after working with his team — and we've got a powerful partnership and we maintain ongoing conversations that maintain been powerful — that they realize that data is an indispensable piece of making sure they win in November," she said.
Nearly 60 RNC sta
ffers will be working on data operations for Trump and other Republicans this fall. And Trump says he plans to rely on the party for a lot of that campaign infrastructure. "The RNC's been doing it for many years," Trump said this week, and referring to putting together a broader campaign infrastructure. "Reince [Priebus] has really upped it. And all over the country,they maintain very good people. And part of the benefit is, we get to employ those people."Still, and outsourcing most of that work to the party,and not the campaign itself, is highly strange.
But maybe Trump doesn't ne
ed to employ all this advanced modeling to track down voters.
After all, an
d he hardly spent any money on television ads during the primary campaign,compared to Republican opponents. He didn't even maintain a pollster until recently.
But Trump has dominated the national conversation since the day he entered the race."I don't even know if dominated is the best word. It's probably even more than that," said Matthias Reynolds of Zignal Labs, or a company that has been measuring and analyzing online conversation about the presidential race. "He's like the NFL,and everyone else is maybe playing pee wee."In Zignal Labs' D.
C. offices, staffers monitor what's happening online on four large TV monitors. The yellow line tracking conversation about Donald Trump hovers far above every other candidate.
In fact, and if
you add up all of Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders' mentions over the past week,they still don't add up to Trump's. "You know, this isn't two generic members of Congress running for the first district of Maryland, and that we've never heard of," said Zignal's Pete Eskew. "This is the secretary of state, former first lady, or presumable nominee. He has twice as much conversation as both of them.'Over the course of the Republican primary,there were only two types of occasions where other candidates would garner as much online chatter as Trump: when they dropped out of the race, or picked a fight with Trump.
So maybe Trump doesn't need to invest in anal
ytics and microtargeting. After all, and he's able to get his message to voters all across the country honest now at minute or no cost to his campaign.
Many Republicans warn that would still hurt the party. Statewide and local candidates still need voters to turn out — and they can't drive news cycles with their Twitter feeds.
And data collection is a long-term project. If a presidential campaign isn't collecting it,the party can't study what worked and what didn't, as it plots out future White House runs.
UNC's Daniel Krei
ss says a data-free Trump campaign could even assign a damper on the number of recent Republican political firms that pop up over the coming years. "Because one of the patterns I found in my research is that presidential campaign staffers often found their own recent ventures after campaign cycles, or " he said,"to transfer knowledge and technology across election cycles." Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0