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Who is Obama's publicity adverse Campaign Manager-David Plouffe (The commander of Obama's nerd army)

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Pirate Smile Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-20-08 09:11 AM
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Who is Obama's publicity adverse Campaign Manager-David Plouffe (The commander of Obama's nerd army)

Plouffe Piece

by Noam Scheiber

The commander of Obama's nerd army.

Post Date Wednesday, May 07, 2008

-snip-
It was a spectacular display of intimate Iowa knowledge. "At the end of that people felt, 'Okay, ... you're right, we are going to win Iowa,'" recalls Kirk Wagar, a member of Obama's national finance committee. And it was quintessential Plouffe. Beginning with Harkin's 1992 campaign for president, Plouffe has served multiple tours in Iowa and become the de facto president of a small fraternity of operatives who pride themselves on mastery of the state's demographics, geography, and procedural rules. If political strategy tends to attract nerds--think Karl Rove's obsession with the election of 1896--Iowa attracts the nerdiest of the bunch.
It's often assumed that the limits of such political nerd-dom roughly coincide with the borders of Iowa and New Hampshire--that presidential campaigns become momentum-driven, television-saturated affairs once they leave the early states. There's no doubt something to this--the Obama campaign has been running on a mix of soaring rhetoric and media buzz since January. But, under Plouffe, the tedious work of crunching numbers and scouring precinct maps has remained a central campaign obsession. Plouffe has run the entire Obama campaign as though it were the Iowa caucus writ large. And it's brought Obama to the brink of the nomination.

-snip-
As the primary calendar fell into place, it became clear that February 5 wouldn't much resemble the Super Tuesdays of old. Instead, it would be a de facto national primary that sprawled across two dozen states. The conventional wisdom was that mechanical strength would get you nowhere in such a contest, since you couldn't organize half the country. What would be decisive was local establishment support and name recognition, which Hillary Clinton had in droves.
Plouffe disagreed. Back in April 2007, he'd hired a former Gephardt strategist named Jeff Berman, probably the party's most respected authority on the dark art of delegate math. When Plouffe and Berman sized up the states in play on February 5, they realized they could at least secure a draw, sending the race into a two-week period that strongly favored Obama. The idea was to build a sturdy base by targeting key primaries and relentlessly organizing the caucus states. By fall, Plouffe and his field staff, led by a lieutenant named Jon Carson, were already setting up ground operations in places like Idaho, Kansas, and Colorado. Carson's teams had cased these states for months when the Clintonites finally arrived. In effect, Plouffe wanted to turn the entire campaign into Iowa.

One of Plouffe's most underappreciated accomplishments began, fittingly enough, with a spreadsheet. After New Hampshire, Plouffe realized that, if the campaign was going to become a battle of attrition, he needed convince onlookers that the pledged-delegate total was sacrosanct. "His thought was that we need to cement that into the conventional wisdom," recalls an Obama aide. "That we couldn't rely on media outlets, because different folks have different standards." To this end, Plouffe had Berman set up a sophisticated counting operation that would compile votes and generate delegate allocations. The product of all this hairy math would be an intricately constructed, color-coded Excel file showing a state-by-state breakdown, along with projections going forward. One of the first such spreadsheets trickled into the press shortly after February 5, showing Obama with a pledged-delegate lead of 24 and projecting a tight race through June. It had all the look and feel of a leaked internal document, and its immaculate birth in a Bloomberg article only reinforced the impression. The pundits commenced buzzing over this rare glimpse inside the thoughts of the Obama campaign.

Over the course of the next two weeks, Obama piled up eleven straight victories and an ever-widening delegate-lead. (Plouffe had shrewdly conserved money for a mid-February blitzkrieg, while the Clinton campaign blew its cash coming up short on Super Tuesday.) The Obama campaign was dropping spreadsheets like a nightclub drops fliers, and--whether or not the early Bloomberg leak was intentional--they were now a sophisticated form of spin. Before long, the press had essentially accepted pledged delegates as their yardstick. On the day when Obama had achieved what the campaign deemed an insurmountable lead, Plouffe let it be known he thought the race had reached a turning point, according to one colleague.
Plouffe's penchant for understatement makes colleagues' ears perk up any time he ventures such an opinion. Pretty much the only time anyone in Obamaland can recall Plouffe betraying real emotion was on a late-night conference call after the crushing loss in New Hampshire. Plouffe methodically laid out the plan for the upcoming states. Then, at a fraction of a decibel louder than his usual gravelly whisper, proclaimed, "Now let's go win this fucking thing." It would have been unremarkable coming from any other operative. For Plouffe, it was tantamount to a dramatic reciting of Mel Gibson's battlefield monologue in Braveheart. Onward, nerd soldiers.

http://www.tnr.com/politics/story.html?id=f746721e-74d7-4313-9231-7e75e5d56fbb&p=1
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KittyWampus Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-20-08 09:21 AM
Response to Original message
1. Awesome reading. Even if I don't like TNR
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phrigndumass Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-20-08 09:27 AM
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2. K/R - spreadsheets rawk!
:dunce:
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Raven Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-20-08 09:37 AM
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3. I met him last spring in Manchester at a meeting of NH grassroots
Edited on Sun Apr-20-08 09:38 AM by Raven
organizations that the Obama campaign held. There were 12 of us around a conference table representing most of the home grown organizations in the State. He walked in to chair the meeting and I thought he was a priest or a monk or something. He was dressed in black and spoke very softly. Nothing like what I expected. He spoke about organizing from the ground up and I knew then that the campaign had legs.
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Debi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-20-08 09:42 AM
Response to Reply #3
5. We had dinner w/him in the winter in Iowa (I can't remember if it was October/November)
and remember meeting him thinking he was quiet, petite, unremarkable. But he captured my husband's and my attention during the entire meal. WOW! This guy knows his stuff! (Oh, and we were LUCKY to have Jon Carson take up residence in our office during the 2000 caucus countdown - he was working for Gore at the time.)
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Buzz Clik Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-20-08 09:42 AM
Response to Original message
4. Okay, I'm going to copy your quoted material into another piece of software so I can read it.
Do us a favor next time and don't randomly highly 50% of the text.
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Buzz Clik Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-20-08 09:52 AM
Response to Reply #4
7. Fascinating article. Thank you.
We have a resident nerd who is totally into spreadsheets and posts them regularly. Great stuff.

I'm curious about the posting date. May 7, 2008? I don't get it.
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Pirate Smile Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-20-08 09:54 AM
Response to Reply #7
8. I would guess that is the date the Magazine gets published.
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ChairmanAgnostic Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-20-08 09:51 AM
Response to Original message
6. Plouffe v. Penn
Guess who is winning?

Tain't Marked as a win for Hillary, that's for sure.
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roseBudd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-20-08 09:55 AM
Response to Original message
9. It is fitting because us nerds (educated) tend to support Obama, nerds are
dispassionate, pragmatic, logical people.
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BeyondGeography Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Apr-20-08 09:56 AM
Response to Original message
10. Great stuff
K&R
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