Senate Democrats are posting record fundraising hauls for the midterm elections — but Republicans, boosted by a deluge of secret money, figure to more than keep pace. So if Democrats do end up beating the odds and holding onto control of the chamber, it might be less because of how much money they spent, and more because of how they spent it.
Simply put: While both sides are flooding the airwaves with ads, Democrats are also investing serious money in a ground game of unprecedented strength. And that could make the difference.
Three weeks from Election Day, the Senate rests on a knife-edge. Most analysts give Republicans somewhere between a 50% and 60% chance of picking up the six aggregate seats they need to win control.
Democrats are pursuing a two-pronged strategy: Spend enough on ads to stay competitive, while also investing in major field resources to get supporters to the polls.
The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) is spending $60 million on the Bannock Street Project, a turbo-charged, data-driven ground operation that aims to ensure the 2014 electorate looks more like 2012—which saw massive turnout from minorities and young people—than the Republican wave election of 2010. Named for the Denver street where the 2010 campaign of DSCC chair Michael Bennet was located, Bannock Street has said it’s hiring 4,000 paid staff to get out the vote. Republicans have nothing comparable.
“We are investing far more in turnout than the Republicans,” Justin Barasky, a spokesman for the DSCC, told msnbc. “Bannock Street is the largest most sophisticated turnout operation in the history of Senate races.” Barasky’s boss, DSCC executive director Guy Cecil, said in a statement Monday that Bannock Street “is already paying dividends for campaigns across the country as we head towards GOTV.”
In each of four of the tightest Senate races—Alaska, Colorado, Iowa, and North Carolina—Democrats and their allies spent at least three times as much as the other side on voter contact operations, according to numbers compiled recently by the New York Times. In Iowa, Democrats spent over 10 times as much, and in Alaska, around nine times as much.
Of course, it makes sense that Democrats would focus more than Republicans on the ground game. Driving the dynamics of the 2014 contest is the reality that in recent years, Democratic voters—especially minorities and young voters—haven’t turned out for midterms at anywhere near the rate they have for presidential elections. Simply put, an aggressive get-out-the-vote operation is likely to be far more valuable to Dems than Republicans, whose voters tend to show up more consistently. And getting people out for these midterms—at a time when many Democrats are discouraged by the tough slog that Obama’s presidency has turned into—figures to be a much taller order than the 2012 election.
Still, that doesn’t mean the 2012 cycle holds no lessons for this year. That time around, Republicans and their allies enjoyed a clear edge on the air, but Democrats and their allies spent enough to largely turn the air war into a wash, amid evidence that voters got so deluged with TV ads that by election day they’d tuned them out.
Then, Democrats dominated Republicans on the ground. Over a year in advance, the Obama campaign began placing field staff in communities around the country, including many that had rarely been targeted by national political campaigns. The effort relied on grassroots organizing techniques developed by Harvard experts and pioneered by the first Obama campaign, as well as sophisticated data software. In one mark of the Dems’ advantage, the Obama campaign had 122 local offices in the election’s most important state, Ohio, compared to Mitt Romney’s 40. The field mismatch made the difference on election day.
Still, if Democrats are to repeat that strategy, they’ll need to avoid getting blown out in the money and spending race—both to fund Bannock Street, and to stay competitive on the air.








