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McCracken Campaign Projects Turnout of 60,000


by: David Mauro

Mon Feb 09, 2009 at 09:00 AM CST


(As I have previously disclosed, I am a supporter of Lee Leffingwell.)

At Brewster McCracken's campaign kickoff yesterday, senior field strategist Temo Figueroa, who served as President Obama's national field director, layed out the McCracken campaign's path to victory.

For those of you who missed the kickoff, don't worry. I was watching the Rockets in Houston but still was able to see part of Figueroa's presentation by watching the Austin Chronicle's City Hall Hustle.

Figueroa said they were expecting a turnout of 60,000. That, he said, would be 13 percent of Austin voters.

Obviously Temo Figueroa knows a lot about this kind of stuff, but that turnout estimate initially struck me as low.

Although there were only 35,858 ballots cast in last May's municipal election, there are recent precedents that point towards higher turnout in this year's election,

The last race for Mayor of Austin saw 62,016 ballots cast. In that election, Will Wynn coasted to an easy re-election by defeating Danny Thomas and the late Jennifer Gale.

In Wynn's first race for Mayor, though he easily beat Max Nofziger and Marc Katz without a runoff, 59,929 people voted, for a turnout of 15 percent.

Given that there are three fairly well-known candidates running well-financed campaigns this year, I would think the turnout would be higher in 2009 than it was in 2006 or 2003.

Back in November when Carole Strayhorn said her goal was to get 100,000 to vote, I dug up the turnout numbers for the last two truly competitive Mayoral races in Austin to try to get a better idea of what kind of turnout we could expect.

In 1997, political newcomer Kirk Watson faced off against Council Member Ronney Reynolds. There was 17 percent turnout in this election.

In 1994, Bruce Todd, Daryl Slusher and James Cooley were in a very close three-way race that was destined to go to a runoff (sound familiar?). Over 85,000 people voted, giving the election a turnout of 26 percent.

That was not an anomaly, either. When Bruce Todd and Robert Barnstone ran a close race in 1991, turnout was at 23 percent.

If Austin had a 26 percent turnout this year, a whopping 161,092 people would vote.

Of course, a lot has changed in the last fifteen years and I am not expecting a turnout that astronomically high. For one, city campaign finance laws have significantly affected the amount of money city campaigns spend.

Figueroa and others who have pegged turnout at 60,000 could be exactly right.

But given that McCracken, Leffingwell, and Strayhorn are all going to run hard campaigns (as are Chris Riley and Perla Cavazos in Place 1), there is a chance turnout could go beyond most expectations. 

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Low Turnout (0.00 / 0)
I agree. I remember thinking when the McCracken camp was going over these numbers that I thought the estimated 13% turnout was a little low. Like you said, who knows, maybe they're right, but I would think this race, particularly post-Obama-mania, would bring the voters out. I think it'd be great if we could see a turnout of over 20%.

Dunno (0.00 / 0)
The May elections were post-Obama-mania (Primary edition) and only pulled 8% turnout. I don't see Leffingwell OR McCracken inspiring significant turnout of new voters, though the many-named one may pull a few atypical voters off the sidelines.

[ Parent ]
Not low at all (0.00 / 0)
I know Dallas is not Austin... but in 2007 we had an 8 person high profile well funded Mayor's race that only turned out 12%. So I do not think a 13% turnout is an unusually low prediction.



www.stonewalldemocratsofdentoncounty.org




[ Parent ]
factors holding down turnout (2.00 / 1)
  • May Election Date
  • City Council?  What do they do? Do I live in the city limits?
  • My last final is May 1 and then I'm OUT of here!
  • Campaign finance limits
  • City Manager system of governance (Toby runs things anyway!)
  • The only time our local candidates get on Hardball is when they forget why they're supporting Obama.


[ Parent ]
Contribution Limits (0.00 / 0)
Watson was able to raise something like $800,000 in 1997.  That was the last mayoral race before the city elections were restricted by contribution limits.  

There are some strong names in this race, but outside of massive personal loans, we're not going to see the same kind of money in this election that Watson was able to throw down.  

I would say that, if the mayoral campaigns have some good field operations, we could see turnout near 70,000, but that's pretty optimistic.  The money restraints are going to keep the campaigns mostly targeting a universe of traditional voters. If they are able to develop field programs that capture excitement from some newer voters, they could get lucky, but 60,000 is a very safe estimate.  


Incredible insight (0.00 / 0)
Wow, you gotta hand it to Temo. He predicts the turnout will be basically the same as the last couple mayoral elections and get this, because this is where the real insight comes in, that McCracken will need a majority of those votes to win. And to think this guy is traveling town to town giving this advice. What a gift.



re: (0.00 / 0)
I think (though I am biased) that McCracken's best chance to win is to greatly expand turnout beyond the usual city election voters.

If the same people vote as usually do in city elections, Lee Leffingwell will easily win.


[ Parent ]
It's all about (0.00 / 0)
the magic Obama dust. :) Anybody associated with the campaign will live off of it for at least the next two years, competency be damned.

[ Parent ]
Well... (0.00 / 0)
I wouldn't be too quick to cast snark toward Temo. Not like he was just some middle-management schlub. Obama's field campaign was the most robust and successful one that any candidate has run in decades. I'm happy to give the guy some credit until he proves otherwise.

I agree that his estimate may be off a bit, but after the apathy of last years CC elections he could be overestimating for all we know. The finance limits mean much less paid media as someone has already noted, and that will affect turnout significantly. Depends on whether these candidates can spark some interest and get contentious.


[ Parent ]
it wasn't my intention (0.00 / 0)
to cast any aspersions towards Temo.  Actually, the first I've heard of him was last week.  I was referring to the method he is being used, in which it appears a consultant has hired him to barnstorm across Texas, dropping in at various campaign events to sprinkle magic Obama dust over that consultant's candidate.  Temo gets paid, and the candidate gets free media coverage stating that Obama's national field director is "working" for him.  It's a nice way to win or at least tie a news cycle.

But I think Brewster is going to have to go beyond the gimmick approach (video contest? really?) to win this election.  I'm not sure if he can do it, given the relative support levels we've seen.


[ Parent ]
credit where due (0.00 / 0)
Let us be honest, the Obama field miracle should be attributed to Obama.

No organizer got 20,000 people to show up in Austin long before Obama was cool.

No organizer convinced tens of thousands across America to volunteer their time.

I can't speak to the paid organization of Obama, but even with the gobs of money he raised he could not have financed a paid program anywhere near the volunteer program he had in place.

I'm sure Temo is a smart guy with some great process that helps get people elected, but without an inspiring candidate that people feel passionately about and are invested in emotionally...field campaigns like Obama 08 don't happen.


[ Parent ]
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