Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You're ignoring the fact that the Sanders campaign accessed and tried to save another campaign's data. You realize that, right?
Why wouldn't the DNC want to share campaign data? Wouldn't that promote the strongest best candidate winning? Why would you want the best data to win rather than the best candidate?
Please read this to understand. It's by an expert who's unaligned with any campaign:
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/political-animal-...ation_of_what_bernie059035.php
If you have actually volunteered or worked for a campaign, you've probably canvassed and collected data for your candidate. That is proprietary data that belongs only to your candidate. It's used for micro targeting, GOTV, etc. It represents months of staff and volunteer work and a lot of money.
But it's still DNC data, granted embellished by a campaign, but none the less data based off of DNC data. For which the end goal is to determine the best candidate, isn't it? Or are you saying the DNC's goal is not to choose the best candidate, but to choose the candidate with the most money and thus the best data?
I think you don't really understand how it works. It's probably enough to say that pundits agree this would have been a fatal error if Clinton's campaign had done it.
Sanders' spokesman said today that the campaign is really mad this became a "gigantic press issue."
I'm not concerned with why this is an error. Given the rules it was clearly a violation. My question is why isn't campaign data shared? It would be like two divisions within a company not sharing data.
Have you ever worked a campaign? Even as a volunteer? If you had, I think this would be a lot easier for you to understand. Basically, some of the data is shared. Names, addresses, sex, probably even HHI, other folks living at that address, and voter registration status. Other data is gathered by the campaigns - whether the person likes or dislikes a certain candidate, what their big issues are (environment, reproductive rights, LGBT stuff, etc.). That represents literally hundreds of thousands of volunteer hours doing door knocking and talking to citizens.
It is the essence of a campaign, and it's absurd to think that the campaigns would share it.