Showing posts with label tea party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tea party. Show all posts

Friday, November 9, 2012

The evolution of branding, as seen in three U.S. elections

Via Wikipedia
Remember this? It's hard not to. Artist Shepard Fairey's homemade poster became the symbol of Barack Obama's first successful Presidential campaign in 2008. In branding terms, it summarized all of the promise of a new, more positive, empathetic and diverse United States, after eight years of President George W. Bush. It was President Obama's brand.

What made it new and interesting, to a branding nerd like me, is that it was not a "top-down" brand. It incorporated Mr. Obama's face, his official "O" logo, and one of his campaign themes. But in bringing it together in sharable, emotive and graphic form, Mr. Fairey created a meme that could be passed around the emergent social mass-media, remixed, and "owned" by just about anyone. It became Barack Obama's brand not because his campaign team said it was. The brand was what his fans (and enemies) said it was. Branding had made the leap from autocracy (monolithic, professionally-designed brand properties with thick standards guides and "brand cops") to democracy (grassroots, evolutionary and widely distributed). Social media were key to President Obama's political success.

When the mid-term election of 2010 came, the right wing of the United States had caught on to idea of ground-up, populist, branding. And so we saw the rise of the Tea Party movement.  But things had changed already. Branding a political movement had become not a matter of developing one powerful with emotional resonance for supporters to rally around. Instead, it was a broad idea that encouraged individual expression.


As you can see from this page from a Google Image Search, the various Tea Party organizations use a variety of symbolism and messaging. The original movement was one of constitutional literalism and drastic reduction in both taxes and government spending. This old-school conservatism, however, was soon swamped by a plethora of popular "culture war" ideologies taken from fundamentalist Christianity, such as visceral opposition to abortion, the science of evolution, and equal rights for homosexual people, as well as various anti-immigrant, pro-gun and other right wing issues. It became not one movement, but many.

Which brings us to the election that just happened. In 2012, social media have evolved to the point where any person — or idea — can become famous and powerful simply on its own merits.

Early on, organizations such as Planned Parenthood identified the potential for young women to be a significant factor in the election. As a large and established NGO, they took many of the traditional paths to advocacy, such as spending $5,086,007 on political action — most of which went to opposing Tea Party and other ultra-conservative candidates. (They achieved the highest return on investment, 98.58%, of any Political Action Committee in the election, according to TPM.)

Planned Parenthood also engaged in extensive social media campaigning, creating "Pillamina" (a birth control pill mascot who followed Mitt Romney's campaign to highlight reproductive freedom) and a branded campaign, Women Are Watching.

But underneath all the big guns booming the feminist message, two truly spontaneous brands emerged that, in my opinion, really turned out the female voters for President Obama.

One was just three words:

As the election approached, this catchphrase from 2010 gained new life on Twitter as a hashtag. Suddenly, it attached to every news item about Republican politicians who made outrageous comments about birth control, abortion, rape, and women's sexuality in general. It became such a powerful brand that opponents started using it too.


The other branded idea that emerged resulted from a single comment by conservative radio comedian Rush Limbaugh, about a young female law student who was denied the right to speak at a congressional hearing on contraception:
"What does it say about the college co-ed [Sandra] Fluke who goes before a congressional committee and essentially says that she must be paid to have sex -- what does that make her? It makes her a slut, right? It makes her a prostitute. She wants to be paid to have sex. She's having so much sex she can't afford the contraception. She wants you and me and the taxpayers to pay her to have sex."
"Slut"... the word had already been successfully appropriated for the women's movement by Toronto's (and soon the world's) Slut Walk movement. Now the self-branded "sluts" turned their anger on the politicians who would challenge their reproductive freedom. Facebook cause pages with names like "Rock the Slut Vote" and "This Slut Votes" suddenly appeared, attracting legions of followers. On every online social platform, there was a constant flow of political "slut" memes, statements and articles.


Like the Tea Party movement, this was not a single organized movement, but many individuals, brands and interest groups that interacted loudly online. Unlike the Tea Party, the #waronwomen and "slut" brands achieved far more unity in their voice and objectives. The focus was simple: reproductive freedom, choice, and support were women's rights. With a single purpose, feminists were able to expose and ridicule some of the Tea Party's most extremist rogues and tie them to Romney/Ryan campaign through the traditional brand strategy of consistent messaging, followed by proof points. And they seemed to have made a real difference.



While exit polls showed that women in the United States supported both President Obama and Governor Romney at an almost even split (55% vs. 45%) among unmarried women, who make up 23% of voters, President Obama was favoured by 67%.

It is widely reported that a political groundswell of (often young) women won the election. Here's how a writer at Christian Men's Defense Network summarized the results (from BoingBoing):
The famous “gender gap” isn’t really a gap based on gender. The right overwhelmingly wins older and married women. The “gender gap” should more accurately be called the slut vote.
Obama appealed to rich white sluts by forcing someone else (the Catholic church, in this case) to pay for their birth control, and by scaring them about alleged threats to their ability to take advantage of Planned Parenthood’s services (Planned Parenthood being conveniently located in the minority part of town, of course, so as to provide anonymity to visiting white girls whose white girl friends never go over there–except to visit Planned Parenthood themselves). This created a wedge issue in the suburban community that allowed Obama to play more strongly there than he might have if the election ended up purely about the economy or the national debt. 
One thing one has to remember about women, especially slutty ones: They usually don’t make decisions based on reason. So all the Obama administration had to do was scare them that Mitt Romney was going to take away their birth control and their access to abortion. The fear for them is that, without birth control and abortion, they might actually get pregnant and have to give birth. That is scary not simply because of the economic burden of having a child (since, hey, they can get all kinds of cash and prizes if that happens), but because if that happened then everyone would know they’re sluts, and their image as daddy’s pure little snowflake princess goes out the window.
Three elections, with three very kinds of branding playing a major role in motivating voters. When the next (mid-term) election comes in 2014, it will be interesting to watch how the lessons learned in the past three will be applied to creating the next big brand in American politics.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

Today's batshit insane Herman Cain video features killer chickens



The crude attempts ar comedy make this ad too awful to even be considered "so bad it's good."


Over at sickofstimulus.com, they are now crowdsourcing themes for their next ad.




 Why "Sick of Herman Cain's batshit insane videos" is not an option is beyond me.

Also, this made me laugh:


Thursday, November 10, 2011

Tea Party politician's ad says all Muslims want to kill Christians



“Do you really want someone representing you who swears an oath on a Quran? A book that undermines our Constitution and says you should be killed?”

These are the words of Gary Boisclair, who is running against U.S. Representative Keith Ellison in Minnesota's 5th congressional district. Ellison was the first Muslim to be elected to the United States Congress.

Boisclair allies himself with the Tea Party and the anti-abortion movements, and calls himself a Christian.

Here is his press release:


“It is common knowledge that Ellison is proud to publicize his devotion to the writings
contained in the Koran. 
This TV ad references several verses in the Koran which call for violence against Jews
and Christians. 
The call to violent acts against Christians and Jews within this ‘holy’ book should alarm
every American. The fact that a U.S. Congressman swore an oath on a book that calls for
most of us to be persecuted is an outrage. 
The Koran is a pillar in Islam’s ‘Sharia Law,’ which is a comprehensive code of ethics
governing both the private and the public behaviors of all ‘good’ Muslims.  Sharia law—
as seen in dozens of Muslims nations—leads to the oppression of its non-Muslim
citizens, and the loss of fundamental human rights for all.  
The fact that Ellison swore an oath to uphold the Constitution on a book that would
destroy the Constitution is as ludicrous as it is absurd. 
We did not pick this fight; Islam’s war against Christianity and human liberty has raged
against us for 1400 years. We are merely responding with the truth."
The truth... hmmmm.

Wikipedia has Ellison saying, "The district I represent is the kind of district where you can have a Member of Congress stand up for religious tolerance and against religious bigotry, against anyone, but also stand up for the rights of gays too." Not exactly out to kill, is he?

On the other hand, if we're going to accuse people of blindly following every policy in their religion's holy books, let's accuse Boisclair of supporting things like this:

"And they warred against the Midianites, as the LORD commanded Moses; and they slew all the males. And they slew the kings of Midian, beside the rest of them that were slain; namely, Evi, and Rekem, and Zur, and Hur, and Reba, five kings of Midian: Balaam also the son of Beor they slew with the sword.
And the children of Israel took all the women of Midian captives, and their little ones, and took the spoil of all their cattle, and all their flocks, and all their goods.And they burnt all their cities wherein they dwelt, and all their goodly castles, with fire. And they took all the spoil, and all the prey, both of men and of beasts. And they brought the captives, and the prey, and the spoil, unto Moses, and Eleazar the priest, and unto the congregation of the children of Israel, unto the camp at the plains of Moab, which are by Jordan near Jericho.
And Moses, and Eleazar the priest, and all the princes of the congregation, went forth to meet them without the camp. And Moses was wroth with the officers of the host, with the captains over thousands, and captains over hundreds, which came from the battle. And Moses said unto them, Have ye saved all the women alive? Behold, these caused the children of Israel, through the counsel of Balaam, to commit trespass against the LORD in the matter of Peor, and there was a plague among the congregation of the LORD. Now therefore kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman that hath known man by lying with him. But all the women children, that have not known a man by lying with him, keep alive for yourselves."
"I approve of this message"

 Okay, then.

Friday, November 4, 2011

F'd Ad Fridays: The race card is now in play for Cain 2012



For what it's worth, I think"Lynching", is one of those words that probably shouldn't be used outside of its awful historical meaning. It's like comparing your opponent to Hitler. It diminishes the awfulness of a really big issue just to make a cheap point.

I also love the irony: "That's what liberals do... they can't talk about the issues so they hit below the belt."


Ummmm... okay.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

A weirdly intense political ad from the USA




Herman Cain is a Republican running for the 2012 United States presidential nomination. A Tea Party supporter, he has been criticized for promoting tax policies that favour corporations over working people, discriminatory statements against Muslims, and absolute views against reproductive choice and equal marriage. He has also made a point of distinguishing himself as ethnically different from President Barrack Obama:
In an interview with Bloomberg view, Cain argued that he is a 'black American' rather than an 'African American' on account of being able to trace his ancestors within the US, describing Barack Obama as "more of an international...look, he was raised in Kenya, his mother was white from Kansas and her family had an influence on him, it’s true, but his dad was Kenyan". Interviewer Jeffrey Goldberg pointed out that Obama had spent 4 years of his childhood abroad, and that it was in Indonesia - not Kenya, at which point Cain revised his claim.

Cain is perhaps typical of the "businessman" style of politician, who has excelled in the private sector (as former Godfather's Pizza CEO) and believes that kind of thinking can make government more efficient. You can see this in the ads "no-nonsense" delivery. But why the conspicuous 1970s action movie style cancer stick drag by campaign manager Mark Block? Why be so weird about it?

Tom Murphy of Mother Jones gives this backstory:
"As the New York Times pointed out on Sunday, there's another side to Cain: lobbyist. And as a lobbyist for the National Restaurant Association in DC in the 1990s, Cain was one of the tobacco industry's best friends on K Street. His group received big bucks from major cigarette manufacturers, and returned the favor by opposing things like smoking bans."


So I guess that explains that. But not the slow-mo smile by Cain at the end. The Daily Beast's Michelle Goldberg Tweeted, "his smile at the end of this ad is the creepiest fucking thing I've ever seen". And it really is.

Next year's election campaigns are going to be really interesting. Especially from the sidelines.

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

The pathetic politics of hate and fear

My friend Rachel (who lives near Barcelona) sent me this political ad from one of Catalonia extreme right-wing anti-immigration parties:



My first reaction (besides recoiling at its sheer shittiness) was anti-racist outrage. My second reaction was, how far are we old-school Canadians from this level of anti-Islamic ethnic paranoia?

Especially since some of our southern neighbours seem to already be there:


I'm not scared of Islam. I'm scared of ethnocentric hate... by anybody, towards anybody.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Adopt socialized healthcare, America. It's just what them Chinamen want!

Sorry for the slur in the headline, but how else would you describe the key message of this political ad?



Mother Jones posted this ad by"Citizens Against Government Waste" whose mission is to "eliminate waste, mismanagement, and inefficiency in the federal government." This includes ongoing lobbying against "Obamacare".

Calling for political debate is one thing. But race-baiting right with Americans with fears of a Chinese planet is uncalled for. Besides which, it was the decidedly non-socialist Nixon who opened the gates to trade with China to begin with.

The best (and by that I mean "most appalling") part of the video is when the menacing professor shows the lecture hall full of Communist automatons what evil geniuses them Chinese really is. I was almost expecting an "ah-so"...

He would, however, make an awesome Bond villain.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

The Tea Party takes on Communist Constructivist design

The first issue of the Tea Party Review magazine is out. Which is great, because America is a land of free speech.


But that cover... where have I seen an ordinary working man fondling his flag like that before?


Oh, my.


Oh, dear.


Thought so.

Ideologies may come and go, but the emotional and visual language of jingoistic patriotism stays the same.