YDA Actions Don't Leave Much Room or Time for Posturing

This is a response from Tony Cani, Political Director of the Young Democrats, to a blog I wrote earlier this week. --Mike

I am happy to clarify our involvement in College Affordability work. I believe that you will all find that Michael's concerns that YDA was just posturing instead of taking action are grossly unfounded. In fact, we are aggressively pursuing steps beyond his suggestions to "capitalize" on the GOP no votes.

Quick facts:

* YDA is an active member of the College Affordability coalition which works with other youth organizations to get legislation through Congress that helps students. (It is important to note that we are the only partisan organization actively involved).

* Over 2200 YDA members sent letters to congress pushing for this legislation over the last week from www.yda.org/writecongress. This type of lobbying is something House leaders DESPERATELY wanted support with.

* YDA pushed for phone calls directly to House members the day before and day of the vote, resulting in a few hundred calls coming from www.yda.org/callthehouse.

* This isn't the first time we've done this. Since HR5 was up during the first 100 hours, we have employed the tactics above, local chapter efforts, and a text messaging campaign. To "sign our mobile petition" for lower interest rates you can text "COLLEGE" to 3-5-3-2-8. We then send updates to your phone on when votes are happening etc.

From the beginning of the Democratic majority in Congress, we have seen college affordability work as an opportunity for us in three ways:

First, it allows us to lobby for legislation which young people support and need - in and of itself a great cause. Secondly, it provides good "programming" for our local and state chapters who are always looking for ways to work with other groups in their area and around the country. Finally, as Democrats deliver on campaign promises to young people, it provides a real opportunity to brand the Democratic Party and individual Congressional Members as the party directly taking actions to improve lives and we can use no votes to highlight the screwed up priorities and empty rhetoric of Republican members.

It is also important to realize that my personal belief (as a long-time local activist, grassroots leader, State Party employee, and YDA State President) is that in order for these efforts to be effective they need to happen on two levels. Nationally we drive the efforts, send emails to our list and leaders asking them to take actions - giving them the information they need to do so well. Then, the real electoral pressure HAS TO COME from the local level. An effort on a college campus inside a district, or a letter to the editor from someone in the district has a much greater impact than something coming from those DC political hacks at YDA or random out of town activists writing from their out of district homes. When we are hitting from both fronts simultaneously however, I think we can make a big impact.

On to specifics. About 8 days ago I sent a memo to all our State Presidents describing the efforts we were taking nationally to lobby for this bill, and explaining to them the branding opportunities. In it, I gave them bill summaries, and some ideas for potential individual and chapter actions to take.

30 minutes after the bill passed, we then sent a follow up memo to all our state presidents with each of the No Votes and their CD (something we scrambled to get together fast) so they could start planning their efforts. I sent the same list to all our coalition partners as well.

We are urging our local chapters to do the following:

* Send a press release condemning their individual member who voted no (or praising the yes vote). We have a sample release to them for these purposes.

* Start a letter to the editor campaign about the individual member's vote. We have a sample letter to the editor for these purposes.

* Host events that either THANK the members who voted yes, or demand answers from those who voted no.

We did ALL OF THIS after HR5 as well, so it isn't new to our organization. The most creative thing some of our local chapters did back them was have a gigantic thank you card on campus for students to sign which then was to be delivered to the member. This was more about showing students what happened then actually thanking the member - and it was very effective.

Nationally, we definitely have some targets already plotted out that we are especially excited to go after. Expect to see some of this at our National Convention next week which includes a large panel SPECIFICALLY on this issue. Notably, Representative Deborah Pryce who serves the OSU campus, Tom Davis of Northern Virginia, and John Doolittle of California are in for a few surprises.

I think it is important to realize that just because we don't put something on our web page or our blog, it doesn't mean we aren't in the midst of action on a given cause. That being said, we have blogged about our pre-vote efforts and have our college affordability action link prominently displayed on the front of www.yda.org.

I do want to also add that posting something on a web page or blog IS NOT ACTION. It is a first step toward action. I don't know when along the way youth organizations and activists got mixed up about this point. While I think it is exciting that Fred put together a great post with a good target list it will not on its own, except by accident, result in action with on the ground efforts. Alone, a blog post is little more than the same type of posturing that Michael is so concerned with. The key in these efforts, especially in a liberal blogosphere geared toward older Democrats, and to a generation with mounds of evidence showing peer-to-peer communication is the best way to activate them is follow up and local action on the ground - especially by local activists. Additionally, I think it is important to note that a target list limited to people with opponents and an arbitrary assessment of possible victory is something I believe is a bit short sited considering all the surprise from nowheres victories of 2006 and the growing number of young activists all over the country. Just because you live in a place where purple and blue seem impossible to achieve - it doesn't mean your organizing efforts are any less important than anyone else's.

I will however accept that even given what I have written above, it clearly is important for us to do a better job of advertising outside of our internal communication avenues what we are doing. This is a major area where we need improvement and will only amplify what we are already doing.

Finally, I am happy to share that this college affordability work is a model that we are fine tuning for issue/chapter/political work. After convention, similar efforts will be unveiled in turn for Climate Change, the Iraq War, and a yet to be determined poverty/jobs issue. All which have panels to kick them off at our convention. With the recent hire of a Director of State and Local Programs to bolster my national efforts with efforts at the local level - I imagine you will see that we are completely dedicated to exactly the types of efforts Michael is describing.

So, join us. Take action. And if you have any questions feel free to email me at tcani (at) yda (.) org

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Communications Strategy

Tony,

Thanks for giving us such a thorough response.

It sounds like you guys did great work in the fight to see this bill passed. All of the items you list as how YDA is/will follow-up on the College Affordibility victory sound great, and I think you actually put your finger on the problem with your comment about "action vs. posting a blog."

Posting on a blog may not be "action," but effective communications are just as important to an organization as effective action.

YDA obviously has great follow-up actions planned - immediate actions that reinforce the power of collective youth action, as well as future electoral action as I described in my post. But those actions are behind a brick wall. I'm on your mailing list. I'm on my local YDA lists. I subscribe to the YDA blog RSS feed. I've never heard of any of this. There isn't a peep of any of this on the New York YDA website.

This gets to the point of what I wrote last week about transparency in youth organizations and the role of blogs.

Information that is going out to your state leadership obviously isn't filtering down to local members. If I don't know that you are doing something, you might as well not be doing it (from a communications standpoint). The lack of transparency in the actions of YDA means that I, as a member, have no chance to contribute my own ideas. It means I feel like y'all aren't doing your job (even when you are). It means that I don't think the organization representing me in Democratic politics is effective or contributing meaningfully. It makes less inclined to be involved in YDA.

So while I thought you had a milquetoast communications strategy and no extended action plan, in reality you had what looks to be a highly effective and responsive action strategy obscured by a highly-limiting internal, and no external, communications strategy.

Echoing Mike

1) Thanks for the post! It's great to have a dialog going.

2) Thanks for all your great work. This sounds like excellent action.

3) I just want to support your statement that communicating more publicly "will only amplify what (you) are already doing." It often feels like an unnecessary extra step, but taking the time to maintain a public communications channel that's of real value -- in addition to whatever internal communications you do -- can have huge cascade effects for your campaigns. Openness also helps organizations stay healthy.

Anyway, thanks for your post here, and thanks again for your efforts. This is an important win for students, and an important mark of progress for the 110th congress.

same as DP's

I think the YDA is seeing the same challenges that DP's are seeing nation wide. Rapid response from the national level is great - but when the states don't have a mechanism in place to mobalize then you lose the "action" that can be generated from the members.

Sure its great to send thousands of pre-written form letters to your congressional reps - but what does that accomplish - is it personal? Do Reps really pay attention to those? Or do you just get a form letter right back?

Instead if the YD's could create infrastructures within their states to mobilize their members into call centers to phone bank Rep's DC offices - have phone bank parties to make calls from every collage YD chapter in the state one afternoon or one lunch hour. At that same party - have them hand write an actual letter using the talking points and snail mail it into the Rep's DC office.... hand written letters totally get street cred - esp when there are a ton of them. Remember hand writing letters to primary and caucus voters for Dean??

Next? Create not just a rapid response email team but a rapid response blogging team. Posting it on the YD site is only the beginning. Do YD's have a "press list" of state based bloggers who are sensitive to their needs? Would they blog about the issues that matter to YD's and hold local Rep's accountable and spread the word?

But let's face it - most YD chapter heads received the national memo and said - dude... I got a paper due - and just forwarded it along to a few people and that was the end. There is very little actual power or influence of the YD's esp at the state level. I think most state party chairs and members just pat them on the head and say ... awww one day you'll grow up and be a donor just like the good democrats! And that's their only available action.

I think that's one of the main reasons that the non-party more hip groups are more successful at creating meaningful action on a broad range of issues not just ones that impact the bottom line for students but many issues that both directly and indirectly affect young people.

just my 2 cents