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In the interest of speed and timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain spelling or grammatical errors.
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Dean propels presidential bid with Internet
Friday August 15, 2003
By ANICK JESDANUN AP Internet Writer
Click by click, high school English teacher Sherry Stanley is
working to help Democrat Howard Dean meet the tough requirements to
get on Virginia's presidential ballot.
Through an e-mail list, she found dozens of Dean supporters in
her state who helped get hundreds more to sign petitions. For the
petition drive, she publicized launch parties on the candidate's
Web site, where such events are deftly listed by ZIP code
proximity.
Stanley is on her way to getting the 10,000 signatures needed to
qualify in a state the Dean camp says would otherwise have been a
close call for lack of money and staff.
Like no other political candidate, the former Vermont governor
has used the grassroots power of the Internet to surge to the top
tier of the Democratic presidential pack.
The Dean campaign's Internet fluency has enabled it to reach out
to voters who feel disenfranchised, to persuade them to donate,
and, perhaps most important, to encourage and co-opt independently
organized projects by supporters like Stanley.
``On a scale of 1 to 10, I think even the most partisan
Republican has to give Dean an 11,'' said Larry Purpuro, who
coordinated the Republicans' e.GOP Project in 2000. ``He's truly
made it a platform for people to do a whole lot of things. It's not
just a couple of gimmicks.''
Other candidates have used the Internet before Jesse Ventura
to organize his successful 1998 run for Minnesota governor, Sen.
John McCain to raise money following his New Hampshire primary win
in 2000.
But not like this.
``Dean is doing both of those times ten, plus he is adding a
number of dimensions,'' says Phil Noble, a Democratic political
consultant who runs PoliticsOnline in Charleston, S.C.
Pretty good for someone who didn't know much about technology
before this campaign.
Joe Trippi did, however. Dean's campaign manager, Trippi moved
to Silicon Valley as a teen, studied aeronautical engineering and
had advised high-tech firms like Progeny Linux Systems.
After Dean raised the idea of running a decentralized campaign,
partly because he didn't have much money to hire staff, Trippi
suggested the Internet. At the same time, Dean supporters were
finding each other independently, using a Web site called
Meetup.com designed for people with common interests.
``Did the Net find Howard Dean or Howard Dean find the Net?''
Trippi asks. ``It was a little of both.''
By treating the Internet as integral and not an afterthought,
Trippi says, the campaign returns to the people the power taken
away by television, which he calls a concentrated information
source that benefits big money.
While most candidates' Web sites are basic letting supporters
volunteer, donate, get newsletters Dean's was the first to post a
frequently updated Web journal, called a blog, that lets visitors
provide the campaign with valuable feedback.
``It creates a continuous stream of information,'' said Steven
Schneider, co-founder of the research site politicalweb.info. ``It
creates an energy'' that gives volunteers a feeling of ownership in
the campaign.
Dean's use of the Internet has:
Helped the campaign raise $7.5 million in the April-June
period, the most among Democrats. About 40 percent came from the
Internet in the final week as Dean's Web site acquired a telethon
flavor.
Spurred donations, averaging $53, over four days in late July
that totaled more than half a million dollars, outdoing the
$300,000 collected by Vice President Dick Cheney at a
$2,000-a-plate fund-raiser.
Brought Dean supporters together in coffee shops and bars
across the country with the help of Meetup.com. What began in
February as unsanctioned gatherings has morphed into monthly
meetings, with Dean and his representatives attending.
Encouraged the campaign to dabble with wireless and Internet
video, alerting supporters on cell phones of upcoming television
appearances and creating a TV-like site with ads and footage from
major events.
That is not to say Dean's site is always ahead. The campaign
site for President Bush, though lacking in many basic features, is
the lone site with a searchable database of campaign donors.
And, there have been bumps on the digital campaign trail, no
surprise given the freedom of action on the Internet.
One is the Dean Defense Forces site, which Trippi says ``will
once in a while overdo it.'' Not connected to the campaign, the
site's members flood the e-mail boxes of reporters and opinion
makers perceived to have slighted Dean.
The campaign tolerates it all. It even links to the Defense
Forces, whose founder is a University of Montana student.
Trippi is mindful of the political perils of such an open
campaign. Rival operatives can covertly attend Meetups.
Rivals are also adopting Dean's Internet tactics.
Sen. John Kerry, for one, has since joined Dean in paying Meetup
$2,500 a month to customize messages and coordinate e-mail lists.
Kerry and Sen. Bob Graham of Florida have also started campaign
blogs.
Trippi professes not to worry. Only the right candidate can
effectively cultivate the grass roots online, he maintains.
Political analysts tend to agree.
``A terrible candidate with a great Web site is a terrible
candidate,'' Noble says.
Michael Cornfield, research director at the Institute for
Politics, Democracy and the Internet, expects many of Dean's
techniques to be adopted next year in lower-profile races and
perhaps this fall in the California recall campaigns.
There's still no telling whether the early Dean support will
inspire votes in the primaries and caucuses next spring.
Analysts say he'll still need some traditional campaigning like
more television ads, and he'll need to win over traditional
Democratic constituencies.
``If he sits on his laurels and thinks, `I'm the high-tech
candidate this time,' and doesn't do anything else, it doesn't get
him anywhere,'' says Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet and
American Life Project. ``At the end of the day, the real compact
between a candidate and the voter is what happens in the voting
booth, not what happens at the Meetup site.''
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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