
[Act Blue co-founder Ben Rahn joins us in the comments to discuss fundraising and other great ideas for progressives. Please stop in and give Ben a good FDL welcome. Thanks! -- CHS]
When I started blogging it was such a solitary deal– just me and my computers and my iTunes in my pajamas down in the office. But now… oh, it’s just a non-stop party. Actually I don’t even own pajamas and I’m not a partier but blogging has become way more than just a solitary endeavor.
I’ve met some incredible people through blogging. I love hanging out with John Amato because he’s so creative and he comes up with the most incredible ideas every single day. I mean this guy changed the blogosphere already and he comes up with innovations that are years ahead of themselves. And Jane Hamsher explained html and Daily Kos to me — after I was "blogging" for 6 months!
There have been so many people I’ve met through blogging.
And I want to introduce you to one who has been incredibly helpful to me and incredibly helpful to the progressive movement — and who is willing to be helpful to you too. Folks, meet Ben Rahn, co-founder, with Matt DeBergalis, of Act Blue, which you may have heard me mention once or twice in the past. I always refer to it as PayPal for Democrats. I think Ben is going to explain it better.
Ben’s from Virginia and Matt’s from Indiana and they met at an MIT geek camp between junior and senior years of high school. Afterwards Ben, now 29, studied physics and math at Harvard and Matt wound up going to MIT, studying electrical engineering and computer science and is pretty well-known for being one of the best software developers to come out of there in many years.
As for so many people around the blogosphere, George Bush was the inspiration that got Ben and Matt to turn their attention — and their incredible talents — towards politics.
"I remember reading something about arsenic standards," Ben told me a few days ago. "That sticks out in my mind as the straw that broke the camel’s back. I had voted for Gore, but like a lot of people, I had no idea how dangerous Bush was going to be. We were worried about having a dim bulb in the White House but even by 2001 we started seeing who he was appointing– like Ashcroft– and knew there were problems. And then the abuses after 9/11… how very quickly the rhetoric became ‘you’re with us or against us,’ even if it was about tax cuts for the rich and curtailing civil rights… their whole domestic agenda."
In 2002 Ben did some volunteer work in Jeanne Shaheen’s senate race (which was stolen by John Sununu, Ken Mehlman and a crooked gang of right wing thugs) and found the process meaningful and challenging. He liked the idea of getting people involved. And then Matt ran for Cambridge City Council– a grassroots exercise that led, indirectly, to the founding of Act Blue.
They kicked around some ideas centering on volunteer recruitment and by April of 2004, inspired by the Dean campaign, Emily’s List, MoveOn.org and Markos’ work at Kos, everything came together for them in the form of Act Blue.
True Majority, the PAC started by Ben Cohen (of Ben & Jerry’s) was the first big established group to start using Act Blue. They raised $200,000 — split between 15 different candidates — with 3 e-mail appeals.
"Having a running total so people could see that they’re part of a big community that’s having a big impact was important right from the beginning."
Today over 600 Democratic candidates and groups are collecting money via Act Blue– and for 60 candidates Act Blue is their primary fundraising tool. Barbara Boxer, Wes Clark, Harry Reid, Ted Kennedy and Patrick Leahy are early adopters when it comes to PAC fundraising.
Meanwhile, way on the other side of the political spectrum, they’re scrambling to find someone like Ben or Matt — they own the name "Act Red" — although the model is unlikely to work in a Republican environment.
"The entire spirit of Act Blue is that anybody can fundraise online for the Democrat of their choice. It’s a very bottom-up kind of approach; you don’t need any permission from above. You don’t need an Establishment figure to decide a race is important; you can decide yourself what’s important."
This isn’t something likely to be embraced by top-down control freaks — although, interestingly, the DCCC (if not the DSCC) now recommends Act Blue to its candidates.
Act Blue has 4 full-time employees including Ben and Matt (the 2 others being Erin Hill and Jonathan Zucker, both of whom have been unbelievably helpful to Blue America. The #1 source of income to keep Act Blue running comes from voluntary tips from contributors. About 50% of contributors give a tip. As a way of saying a special thanks to Ben today for stopping by, please leave a tip on any contributions you give at our Blue America ACT BLUE Page (or at anyone else’s).
Ben was telling me a cool story about how a Kos diarist, grassrootsmom raised $8,000 for a bunch of Pennsylvania candidates by offering to send all contributors her super-secret brownie recipe. Now that’s incentive!
Today, contribute to anyone you want on our ACT BLUE page and get a free CD. Which CD? Well, if you want country music add .01 cent to your contribution; if you want rock music, add .02; if you want jazz add .03; if you want r’n'b add .04. And if you don’t want a CD… just let your donation end in .00.
Related posts:
- Blue America: Meet Linda Ketner
- Blue America Launches New TV Initiative in Arkansas — And We Need You
- FDL Book Salon Welcomes Matthew Kerbel, Netroots: Online Progressives and the Transformation of American Politics
- Waxman: Blue Dogs Trying to “Eviscerate” Health Care
- Kent Conrad Calls Blue Cross/Blue Shield North Dakota “Irresponsible”





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As always with Blue America threads, please keep the discussion on the subject of this post. Ben is kind enough to join us here today in the comments, and we’re really looking forward to the discussion. Thanks Ben — and thanks, as always, Howie, for a great Blue America topic. Welcome, Ben — and thanks so much for all that you guys do at ActBlue!
Nice to see you Christy. Our Blue America ActBlue Page went over $162,000 this morning. What an incredible community we’re part of! It’s touching and thrilling.
Wow, Howie – that’s awesome!
Very glad to be here!
Before I forget, I wanted to do a quick plug for a conference call we’re going to be doing next week:
On for Thursday, August 31, 7:30pm Eastern Time, we’ll be doing an “essentials of fundraising” conference call — if you’ve never asked anyone for money (or if you think your skills could use a brush-up) this will help you dive in.
Please e-mail rsvp5@actblue.com for call-in information.
OK, now back to your regularly scheduled liveblogging :-)
LOL Ben — I suck at asking for money. Sounds like the call could be useful. :)
Welcome to FDL, Ben. Nice to see you again. Can you explain that contest where you’re giving away prizes for people who raise money on ActBlue?
I don’t have an actual question. I’m simply reduced to fangurl gushing, because I absolutely LOVE the way Act Blue has made fundraising so much easier for campaigns.
It’s robust software, and moving it out to the state level offices is very exciting.
See, I told you I was gonna gush.
Howie Klein @ 2
Howie, that’s awesome!! The Blue America page is an incredible example of what a passionate community can do.
And to re-emphasize what ought to be very clear but can sometimes get lost in the chatter: the candidates are very appreciative.
I think our first moment of “woah, this is real” was in 2004 campaign when Betty Castor’s campaign (for FL-Sen) contacted us saying “so, we have $10,000 pending on ActBlue. We’re doing a media buy tomorrow, can we get that overnighted to us?” And of course we did.
Welcome, Ben. Great to meet you at Ykos and at the FDL Caucus.
Hi Ben, and thanks for joining us! I remember hearing about Act Blue at dKos in your early days, and it’s exciting to see how far you’ve come so quickly.
I would love to join the fundraising call – I am the world’s worst person at asking for money – but unless I can take off from work early, it won’t be possible. There are probably other West Coasters in the same boat as I; any chance you’re planning to make a transcript or podcast of the call available afterwards?
Howie Klein @ 6
Oh! Thanks for the reminder —
We’ll be sending copies of An Inconvenient Truth, Al Gore’s phenomenal new book (and companion to his phenomenal movie) to everyone who raises a total of $600 from at least 6 donors by September 6th.
(Details and answers to frequently asked questions here.)
If you haven’t used ActBlue before, here’s a link to learn how to get started.
I did think of a question after all.
How many states are you all certified (is that the correct term?) in and for folks who are interested in getting on board, what are the steps they need to do to help?
BTW, my colleague Erin Hill is going to join us momentarily — you’ll see her replying to some questions as well.
Erin is a rock star.
Ben at 8 — that’s such a great story. And so emblematic of how much ActBlue can change the entire dynamic for a campaign that isn’t getting the big love from the Beltway gang.
Some of my favorite stuff that we do at FDL is the Blue America work that Howie does for us. I love spotlighting all these races and candidates from all over the country. That is what politics is about for me – people picking up the torch and doing the tough work, one race at a time. You guys at ActBlue are part of what makes that possible…and that is so amazing. Truly great work.
Ben how much of the $7,650,000 or so ActBlue has collected came from the top few blogs?
First, thanks for starting ActBlue. It’s a fantastic way to contribute to the candidates I want to contribute to.
The only question I can think of asking is a technical one. How did you decide on a hosting company? Was it a trial and error thing, or did you get it right the first time? How have they been about keeping the software updated, firewalls manned ;), etc.?
Pachacutec @ 9
Hey Pach — thanks for the welcome! That was actually my colleague Matt DeBergalis at YearlyKos :-) (No worries, it happens all the time)
a dumb technical/accounting question : how do you transfer the money from ActBlue into the candidates accounts? direct-deposit followed by individual Emails with contributor info?
Hi Leslie!
I work at ActBlue with Ben and can answer this one! We will be hosting these fundraising calls on a regular basis throughout the fall. Expect the next one to be at a more West Coast friendly time. If you send your email address to info@actblue.com, we’ll be sure you get invited!
We also always offer the tips we discuss on the site here: http://www.actblue.com/content/help (They’re under fundraising!)
Ben – nice to see you here.
Not only has been contributing through your site been easy and fun, I have a growing collection of thank-you notes from some very polite Democratic candidates from across the country. :)
Gee, I thought I recognized the photo. What a dork I am.
Hi, Ben,
I am wondering whether you have considered in some way automating the process for claiming federal (and some state) tax credits for political contributions.
It might something as simply as a placed on the receipt page, where are reminded that up to X amount you can get your money back when filing your tax return.
(It’s been a little while since I donated through you, so I don’t remember whether that’s already there.)
Howie Klein @ 15
Ah, good question. To put the numbers in a bit of context:
In 2004, ActBlue sent about $850k to Democratic candidates; of that, $365k was on the DailyKos page, and Atrios raised somewhere between $50k-$100k. (Don’t have the Atrios numbers at hand right now)
In 2005-06, we’ve sent just under $7 million to candidates, and the biggest blog pages (Kos/MyDD/SwingState, Blue America (of course!) and Eschaton have raised a combined $800k.
So that’s two pieces of good news. First, the blogosphere is on track to more than double (maybe triple?) the amount raised from last cycle. And second, the blogosphere’s early adoption of actblue (along with True Majority, which Howie mentioned) has led a much wider audience to join in as well.
Erin @ 19
Excellent – thanks, Erin! I’ve signed up and will check out the tips already posted as well.
Good question!
We are currently active in 11 states (CA, IA, IN, ME, MT, PA, OR WI, UT, SD, TX), but we hope to get up and running in more! Turning on each state is a costly enterprise, though…about $10,000 per state (thanks to things like legal fees!). We’re actively working to raise the funds we need for each state and you can support our expansion by contributing your favorite state on our “Activate ActBlue” page: http://www.actblue.com/directo…..amp;state=
We’ve been grateful for all the support we’ve gotten so far…we wouldn’t have been able to activate Texas or Utah without the amazing grassroots fundraising campaigns mounted in each of those states!
Petro @ 20
Good! It’s very important to us that the campaigns thank everyone who gives (and raises!) Last cycle we had to do a lot of education explaining to campaigns that this wasn’t regular PAC money — these were individual contributions raised by grassroots folks using our platform — but this cycle we’ve really had a lot of good experiences helping out campaigns who get what we’re doing.
Howie and Ben — Act Blue and in particular Blue America have revitalized me politically. It’s so easy to get discouraged. I remember the feeling I had when Bush nominated Ashcroft too. bleah.
I’ve topped out donating to my guy, Charlie Brown. So I have an idea:
Who would like to trade donations with me? I’ll donate $25 plus a $5 tip to Act Blue to someone’s Blue America candiate in exchange for the same for Charlie Brown.
Any takers? (I can only do it one time; I’m getting to the end of my spendable $$ this pay period!)
*ilson46201 @ 18
Totally not a dumb question…great question!
We collect contributions for candidates during the week and every Monday, we aggregate everything each candidate has received since the past Monday and send them a check for the total.
Candidates can deposit the check in their bank account and then log onto our site to retrieve the names and address of their individual donors. We even offer all that donor information in easy to download/import spreadsheet form!
Prof @ 22
It’s a really good idea — it came up in discussion several months ago, actually, but as you can imagine the to-do list is looooooooong and unfortunately we’re not going to get there this cycle.
I’m trying to remember which states do this sort of thing. Where are you located?
So, do you supply the contributor info to the campaigns then? That’s different than most PACs, right?
I’m trying to remember if I got any thank yous identifiable from my Act Blue contributions, but nothing comes to mind.
Prof @ 22
should be “something a simple”
I’ve used ActBlue with Camps before- great product. Do you do anything to get the word out about non-targeted candidates?
LindaR, I like that challenge. I’ll give another $25 ( tip) to Charlie and you give to… anyone else on the list you like in exchange. What a cool idea. You wanna do it for more than $25 (but less than a billion)?
Cujo359 @
16
We host and manage everything ourselves on our own gear. As you might imagine, our needs are a bit different from a typical site.
Sara @ 31
Hey Matt!! Welcome to FDL. That’s great that Erin and Ben and you are all here! Is Jonathan minding the store all alone?
Howie Klein @ 32
Would $100 work for you? If I can pick, then I’ll take Victoria Wulsin. I was so impressed by her.
ActBlue is not a PAC — it is a “bundler”, an mere aggregator of individual donations.
boadicea @ 29
We absolutely supply contributor information to campaigns for their reporting and thanking purposes!
We’re a little different than most PACs. We are filed with the FEC and each appropriate state entity, but we don’t make any direct contributions ourselves. The money that is raised on ActBlue comes from individual contributors making earmarked donations through us. We provide all the helpful technical stuff that makes it possible for everyone to fundraise and we mail the checks every Monday, but the money accounted for in those checks isn’t from us…it’s from you!
Campaigns report each individual donor in their campaign finance reports and should be thanking each and everyone donor.
I really appreciate access to this service, and I’m trying to get the message out to the netroots that Selden Spencer is here, he’s running in IA-4 opposing a Rubberstamp Republican for Congress (Tom Latham), and he has a shot at taking him down. Do you have any helpful advice.
I have a weakness for Howie’s Saturday afternoon ActBlue sessions here at FDL; as a result I’m now modestly “invested” in two Senate races (Lamont and Tester) as well as a handful of House races across the country. You guys do a great job at vetting candidates – every single one of them is appealing.
(I received the Bob Dylan CD today! Thanks….)
this idea of “trading” contributions if one is “maxed out” sounds good for a national aggregator but I sure as hell would run it by some FEC lawyers first!
*ilson46201 @ 37
We’re both! We are technically a federal PAC (we file seriously long FEC reports!)…but we do indeed engage only in bundling activities.
punaise at 40 — that CD is awesome — almost as good as Howie’s Blue America work for us. (You can stop blushing now, Howie, it’s the truth.)
YES!!! $100 to Victoria and $100 to Charlie! I love it!
LindaR @ 36
Would $100 work for you? If I can pick, then I’ll take Victoria Wulsin. I was so impressed by her.
Ben Rahn @ 28
Christy Hardin Smith @ 43
have to admit to doing a double-take at the Bob Dylan / Victoria’s Secret packaging!
Hi Ben,
With regard to campaign financing, it seems that most of the money donated to any candidate of any party ends up lining the pockets of the (mostly right wing) MSM. Television advertising is super expensive and everybody (even hard core leftys) ends up enriching the bad guys. I recognize this as a flaw in our system, but I realize also that it is the only system that we have and we must work within this existing structure. (I cringe thinking of what socially responsible things we could do with the tons of money that get handed to fat cat media moguls.) What are your thoughts on campaign finance reform?
Sara @ 31
We don’t actually see our role as choosing a set of campaigns to target and promote them. We list all Democrats running for House and Senate (and state offices too) in our candidate directory, and it’s up to individual fundraisers to choose who they want to support.
It’s perhaps not such a surprise that the campaigns running in races recognized to be nail-biters get the most attention, but it’s very important to us that we treat all campaigns equally. Everyone gets the same tools and the same attention from us, and we’re very proud to be seen as an honest broker. (There are actually a number of districts with competitive primaries where several of the candidates were all using ActBlue to do their online contributions.)
punaise @ 40
Yes, one of the benefits of this is the nice additions to my music collection.
PS: Howie, I put in 100 bucks for Dr. Wulsin — whatever you like for Charlie Brown up to that will seal the deal! Thanks!!
Howie Klein @ 44
Ooh, already there. You are very cool.
Erin @ 38
I’ve definitely received thank yous-but I was trying to recall if they were from candidates I contributed to via their own websites or Act Blue.
And the fact that I can’t recall means it’s clearly been too long since I contributed!
Come on, payday!!!
LindaR @ 26
I’ll take you up on that. Busby is my candidate. Thanks, great idea
I’m glad people like the Dylan CD. Contributors today will get a real mixed batch of stuff– from Wynton Marsalis, Herbie Hancock, Nina Simone to Lefty Frizzell and Ozzy Osbourne and “Little” Jimmy Dickens.
*ilson46201 @ 41
omigod?
Howie Klein @
36
hiya, thanks for having us!
i’m bouncing in and out, but the goal is to have the store mind itself.
*ilson46201 @ 41
I have to second *ilson’s suggestion; make sure this doesn’t violate any lesser-known FEC regulations. I love the idea, and would love to see it catch on – so long as it’s legal!
The Nefarious Leslie @ 56
yeah, wouldn’t want to Wade into any MZM / Duke Cunningham type trouble….
Wow…this TOTALLY rocks!! I just got asked to set up two websites for local candidates for ActBlue pages, and here is this post!!!
I do so love these toobz!!
Will RSVP for that concall, thanks, Ben!!
Thanks to all of you– Ben, Matt, Erin and Howie for all you do to make things easier and much more clear. Did I forget to say fun, too?
Huge thanks to FDL for getting the information out there always and engaging in thoughtful and productive conversation.
go Ned, Webb, Tester, Wulsin and more!
It’s so nice to be able to Act Blue instead of feeling so blue.
so this is kinda like “reinventing the wheel” stuff ???
a few days back, I was castigated on DKOS for espoucing a theory of political activity that amounted to one person being a “free agent” GOTV activist by adopting a low turnout precinct with the goal of increasing the democratic turnout in that district
I was told that Democrats didn’t have time to “Reinvent The Wheel while we’re at it”
I received NO RESPONSE to my snaky rejoinder that we didn’t need to reinvent the wheel cuz the wheel we have now works so well
It makes me glad to see people who understand that our political system is BROKEN, and that we DO HAVE TO REINVENT THE WHEEL HERE
Kudos Howie
and even MORE kudos to Ben
we’re not gonna get what we want unless we change the system, cuz the system is what causes the problems we’re trying to fix
(Hey Redd, how’s that for stayin on topic ???)
I think ActBlue is one of the best ideas anyone has had for collective fundraising. The institutions in the Democratic Party can be very helpful to some candidates and hurt others. Here in Iowa, the DCCC has leaned so hard on big donors to support Boswell and Braley–the targetted candidates–that the other three candidates for Congress have been hurt by it.
Ben, thanks so much for ActBlue. I’ve used it several times, and I really appreciate it’s being there.
hackworth @ 47
Being in a public forum and all, I should first clarify that ActBlue as an organization doesn’t formally take stands on particular issues (see above comment about being an honest broker within the Democratic party, etc.)
With that said, I’m happy to share my own view: we need public campaign financing, and I think the clean elections model from Arizona and Maine offer a great model for it.
One of the many bits of thinking behind ActBlue is that even if we can’t get contributions out of the election game altogether, at least we can help level the playing field.
Ben Rahn @ 28
Oregon does: http://www.oregon.gov/DOR/PERTAX/docs/101-662.pdf
Some unofficial Ohio info:
http://www.ocsea.org/political…..credit.asp
Bigger list (from 2002):
http://www.fec.gov/pubrec/cfl/…..chart4.htm
(includes Arkansas, Minnesota, Ohio, Oregon, and Virginia)
Actually, all you have to do at Act Blue now is to include a simple sentence, reminding people that these exist.
(I actually don’t remember whether the federal one still exists or was repealed.)
aggyp @ 52
aggyp — Oops. Aleady done. I’m tapped out for this pay period, but if you remind me in a couple of weeks I’d be happy to do it then — unless of course *ilson’s right and the FEC comes down on us!
matt debergalis @ 33
And if you’re wondering why we need the tips (ahem :-) ), this is a nontrivial part of the answer.
Welcome, Ben. I think ActBlue is a great invention, and I use it.
Tim @ 39
Well, we at ActBlue are familiar with Selden…he uses us on his campaign site to collect contributions!
As far as getting the word out, you can start by creating a fundraising page for Selden (click here to automatically create a Spencer page: http://www.actblue.com/pages/create/9626) and then tell everyone you know about the Spencer campaign, ask them to contribute and keep asking until they do.
We make fundraising easy. You can write about the Spencer campaign on your page, send the link around in emails, put a contribution box on your blog, track who’s donating, and watch the real-time totals as they come in. However, people are going to get interested in the race not because you created a fantastic page, but because you promoted that campaign at the top of your lungs everywhere you went…so I’d start with the page and then keep talking about Selden!
ActBlue makes it easy for me to donate a little here and a pittance there. I know it all adds up. I even donate a little extra to John Laesch (running against Denny Hastert) just coz he’s cute !
Ben & Erin,
I’m running for the WI 89th Assembly seat. It’s amazing reading some of the stories about races around the country using the web as an integrated part of their campaign. I’m finding that I’m ahead of the pack around here – ahead of the voters too. Is there anything you can recommend to help lead the people to the web to utilize ActBlue in rural areas without an established blogging community?
freepatriot 6:19 pm — WHA…??? You just described a critical component of the DNC’s 50-State Strategy!!! You go, dude, knock on your neighbors doors, or any precinct you want to adopt!!
The DNC has helpful materials at their site for the purpose of Neighborhood Outreach; you can check under their 100 Actions (http://www.100actions.com) for more info; there are you-print door hangers and pamphlets describing the 6-point Dem Vision and more.
You might also want to check with your County Clerk, see if there is an existing Precinct Delegate for your area; you may want to coordinate your efforts with them. But if you can’t figure out if there is a delegate or precinct captain, don’t let that stop you. We take no votes and no seats for granted; we fight for every one of them. Go for it, I’ve got your back!
*ilson46201 @ 69
John called me yesterday and I told him you said that last weekend. I think he was blushing over the phone but he did say he wished he had used that picture of himself in the jeep that Christy dug up more often.
angie @ 59
Yay! We aim to make fundraising, but we like to think it can be fun, too!
Wait a minute. Now that I think about it, it can’t be against any rules to contribute to each others’ candidates. If so, nobody could ever do fundraising!
Oh, Ben, I have a question:
Is there a way to become something like a “registered contributor” so we don’t have to re-enter all our information every time we want to donate?
p.s. freepatriot, maybe you can check on your local candidates, make sure they are hooked up with a webpage and ActBlue, then write up and distribute a voters’ guide with their ActBlue info.
Go for it!
LindaR, don’t worry about it. I had every intention of contributing to Charlie again anyway and I know how crazy you are about Vic.
*ilson46201 @ 68
Yeah, I’ve got a little money in races all over the country, thanks to Howie and Act Blue. And now that I’ve followed Erin’s link and read the How-To info, I’m inspired to pick a few candidates and set up my own fundraising page! I know some friends and fam who will likely chip in a few bucks more if I ask, and we all know every bit helps.
I made a deal with a republican once. His mother is a rabid rethug and he only voted to appease her. I told him that I would trade “Not voting with him”. Since we were both going to go to the polls and would each vote the opposite straight tickets, we could both just forgo voting…
I cheated and voted anyway. Its possible taht he cheated too, except that he probably didn’t. He enjoyed lazily living off his mom’s fortune in one of her apartments; smoking weeds and lounging on the couch all day.
Unfortunately, Dubya “won” in spite of my efforts.
Please “moderate” my comment (65 on my screen) with its specific answers to Ben.
Has too many weblinks, I see.
(Heedful of Christy’s request that we not go nuts if our comment is delayed a few seconds, I have waited 10 minutes before requesting — and I’m afraid Ben will disappear before the comment appears.)
Howie Klein @ 71
Hey where’s that jeep photo? I’ve got some extra change in my pocket for Laesch!
Erin @ 72
you put the fun in fundraising
One of my favorite things about ActBlue is that they don’t make me enter anything except the first letter of each line (plus the credit card # of course)
thanks;
Noonan @ 69
First off, huge kudos for jumping into the race. I am totally in awe of people who put themselves out there as a first-time candidate.
Blogs are awesome, but most of the fundraising that you see on ActBlue happens via completely different means. Something went wrong with my reply to Howie’s comment @15, but to hit the key point: of the $7 million that’s come through ActBlue this cycle, about $1 million is from the biggest blog pages — so that leaves a lot of “everything else.”
ActBlue can play a role in all of the traditional ways of fundraising as well:
Call time — when you get folks on the phone, ask them to give *right then* via ActBlue rather than sending you a check. You’ll be able to see it come in real time, so no follow up.
Events — set up an ActBlue page for the event, and use contributions there are your RSVP.
The really special thing you can do with ActBlue is to engage your supporters as fundraisers. We’re actually doing a call about this with candidates next week. Please send e-mail to info@actblue.com with your e-mail address and we can send you details.
your comment was sprung promptly — hit F5 to totally refresh (reload) the page, not just the little “refresh comments” button
The Nefarious Leslie @ 77
They know you’ve done the research they don’t have time/skills to do. You are actually providing a service!
Jenny from the Blog @ 81
Here’s it is: http://www.firedoglake.com/200…../#comments
Erin at 68
The Spencer campaign is one of the ones that the Bigfoots at the DCCC are hurting by sucking up all the cash.
He is an amazing person. This Thursday he’s going to Afghanistan to work with other doctors and try to get a clue about what’s going on there.
I don’t think he would diagnose anyone from a video, either.
Howie Klein @ 82
This is true . . . my impatience is embarrassing sometimes.
LindaR @ 74
I know it’s a Ben question…hope you don’t mind if I answer. :-)
Currently, we don’t have a way to store donor data on the site, but it is one of those great ideas we keep considering.
We’re continually honing the site and adding new features. We take the tips we receive and invest them right back into ActBlue infrastructure and operations…that’s why we especially appreciate it when you all kick in a tip to us..your contributions let us develop cool new features! (not that that’s a hint for a tip or anything :-) )
A couple of days ago, I contibuted to Doctor Wulsin (who’s running against jean Schmidt in Ohio) and I rounded up the contibution to .01 because I don’t want a CD.
Does the meaning of the roundups change?
*ilson46201 @ 87
Hmmm. I didn’t use the refresh comments button, but used the equivalent of F5 in Internet Explorer, namely the “refresh” button at the top of IE.
Now I am wondering if that’s not the same as F5. Hmmm.
Anyway, back on topic:
Ben, others, note the answers to your questions on state political contribution credits.
Contributed $50 (or $100 as a couple) and the State sends it all back to you as part of your tax refund next year (if you remember to claim it).
So no excuse for not donating every year (even in the off-years).
BTW: boadicea, angie, Susan in Iowa, SusanD, neurophius — thanks so much for your kind words!!! We’re all blushing here in the office :)
I want to say that not only is ActBlue great, so is Blue America. Without Howie’s articles on candidates and live blogging with them, I would not know who to send my money to. ActBlue and Blue America work well together. And I love those CDs!
I just want to say thanks again! I learned stuff yet again on FDL that is enormously useful. It really is incredibly empowering to jump in to ActBlue and see that you can pick and choose from many people and make a difference. It is educational, empowering and satisfying.
What I did not realize, though, was that anyone could start anything, anywhere. (Just like my parents teach me still!) It is a simply beautiful evocation of that American dream.
ding777 (#92)- usually the .01 means no CD. The rules only changed for today so people could signal me what CD they want. So today a .00 means no CD and then depending on how many cents you add, I know if you want country or jazz or rock or r’n’b. Every other time it will be add .01 to signal you want no packages comin’ your way. Sorry for the confusion.
Howie 89:
Well okay then… ch-ching!
And seriously, thanks for all you do. You provide a focus and a spotlight and a vehicle that is so critically important to us today – and you are much appreciated.
I tip every time … I wish I could do more. I hadn’t realized you were only operating in a few states, and would love to see you up and running nationwide.
Howie Klein @ 98
Thanks – I didn’t want to waste any resources!
You know, the ironic thing about reading this now, as I’m making fundraising phone calls for myself – the DNC just called asking for a donation.
And a huge thanks to Ben Rahn as well. :)
Jenny (#98)- Thanks; it’s completely a two-way street and I feel we’re a community and I’m so happy Jane asked me to do this. I hope everyone knows that this Saturday we have Jerry McNerney coming for a chat.
Howie — let’s see if I can reproduce my botched reply to question @15 this time :-)
Howie Klein @ 15
Let me break that down into last cycle (2004) and this cycle (05-06):
* In 2004 ActBlue sent $850k to Democratic candidates; of that, about $400k was raised by the top blog fundraising pages (Daily Kos, Atrios).
* In 2005-06, we’ve sent just shy of $7 million thus far, and the top blog pages this cycle (Dkos/MyDD/SwingState, Blue America (of course!) and Eschaton have raised a combined total of about $800k if I’m doing my math right.
So that’s really two pieces of good news:
1. The top blog pages are on track to triple their combined ActBlue total.
2. The early adoption of the blogs have fueled an expansion of ActBlue fundraising by and from folks well beyond the blogosphere.
As a former waitress, I know the cruciality of tips. It would feel tacky not to give to the infrastructure. I think sometimes people don’t realize that even a little bit is a beautiful thing; it all really does add up.
Erin, I followed your link for creating “my page” and am wondering what the advantage is of having a “Susan for Spencer” page in addition to the ActBlue page that Spencer already has? He has a link to ActBlue on his site. Does it matter, in your experience?
can we safely assume ActBlue is now not accepting contributions for Joe Lieberman, sore-loser ex-Democrat ?
Howie Klein @ 102
Everybody wang chung tonite!
Thanks to Howie for doing this for us so reliably and what a great idea to invite Act Blue, welcome! I, too, have put my little bit here and there via the site and it is easy. We enjoyed watching our fdl contributions to Ned Lamont climb.
It also feels so good, when the DSCC or the DLC calls, to say,”No thanks, I donate to individual candidates through Act Blue.” They sputter and try to argue, and I sweetly say thanks and hang up.
And thanks for Neil Young, Howie, from some time ago, love it.
Howie Klein @ 102
yes – let’s help take down the evil Pombo!
Ben, Erin
Do you have any numbers comparing ActTBlue to bulk mailing?
p.s. I never used the tip function before but now I will. Thanks for an easy way to contribute.
The Nefarious Leslie @ 100
I tip every time … I wish I could do more. I hadn’t realized you were only operating in a few states, and would love to see you up and running nationwide.
Thanks! We’re so grateful for all the support…you let us keep expanding.
You can currently use us to support all federal candidates (no matter the state) and to donate to state candidates in those 11 states we mentinoned earlier. We’re going to keep plugging away on the other 39…we want to help Democrats everywhere, too!
Hi – Just popping my head out of the lurk-o-sphere to say thanks to Howie for introducing me (us) to great people that are running for office that I never would have known about and actually having them come to FDL to chat. Thanks to Act Blue for making it so easy to for us to do our part to help take back the country.
Ben @ 104– so the netroots are spreading despite the current government sponsored global warming and quashing of the Constitution?
ah, the smell of freedom and information and citizen action.
nice!
Howie Klein @ 104
I heard Jerry do an interview with Al Franken and he’s an incredible guy with quite a story to tell. A successful wind-farmer, (yes!) and a son who was or still is in Iraq.
McNerney is whip-smart and praise jeebus Franken actually let him speak without too many interruptions. I couldn’t be more impressed. I’m in CA and he’s not in my district but boy oh boy I think he’ll win that seat if he gets any kind of substantial support… he’s that strong.
I hope I’ll be around on Saturday to speak with Jerry and I thank you again, Howie, for everything.
*ilson46201 @
108
After a Democratic primary, we shut off contributions for everyone but the Democratic nominee.
ding777 @ 110
You, sir (or madam) are a gentleman. (or gentlewoman)
Thanks for that answer (and insight), Ben (#105). I have a somewhat related question. I see a lot of politicians are raising money on Act Blue for their PACs, especially Barbara Boxer, Wes Clark, Harry Reid and Teddy Kennedy. And I see Patrick Leahy and Russ Feingold’s PACs are doing it too. Why do some politicians’ PACs not do it? I know you’re not a mind-reader, but what makes someone like Hillary or Edwards not use ActBlue?
After a Democratic primary, we shut off contributions for everyone but the Democratic nominee.
Nicely put. Too bad all Democrats, especially certain Senators, don’t see it that way.
Ben Rahn @ 116
woooooooo-hoooooooooooo!
btw, McNerney’s son pleaded with him to run for office and help set things right again in this country. It’s a very touching story.
ZenNurse (#110)- Glad you like the Neil Young CD. Today Willie Nelson endorsed Claire McCaskill in Missouri and I celebrated by putting up a great live version of “Working Cowboys” by Willie and Neil.
Some call the Kings’ horses and Kings’ men.
As the left gets its act together, the fracturing and fraying of the right continues apace.
Yahoo reports on the loss of clout for the once 50 state strong Christian Coalition.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/200….._coalition
-GSD
Oh, now that tears it! Wait until my indie spouse hears that his hero Willie Nelson endorsed a Democratic candidate!!
Thanks for sharing that, Howie; I need all the ammo I can get to persuade my spouse to vote Dem this fall. If it’s good enough for Willie, should be good enough for him.
ding777 @
112
We’re certainly planning to do some more work around the metrics, but it’s a tough question.
We can all say with very high confidence that people are much more likely to respond to a phone call from a friend than a blast e-mail or a direct (snail) mail. But it’s not clear whether that’s a fair comparison.
I’d love to have numbers that would convincingly demonstrat that this kind of fundraising is extremely powerful, both in terms of the depth of support you get and in terms of the value (cost vs. money brought in, which is really the question campaigns will ask.)
A direct mail vendor can say, for example, exactly how much each piece of mail will cost the campaign. ($ vendor = mail) But it’s hard to say what the “cost” of creating a groundswell of enthusiasm that turns your grassroots support into fundraisers — there’s certainly no well-understood formula (passionate candidate $ for kick-ass staff = explosion?).
Thank you!!!!
If someone made a list of the top ten structural components that make democracy possible in the Age of Infotainment, the internet would be number one.
I also believe Act Blue would be on that list.
I want to echo something said above. I live in MA where our biggest deal is the Governor’s race. By reading Howie and the links from Act Blue, in addition to the huge amount of info we get here at our lovely bloghome, I’ve been able to contribute to a number of races in other states where it really matters.
I received a note from Jon Tester, from Laesch and from Ned. This may have been asked, but do you guys think these candidates are making the connection that the netroots are an important constituency moving forward, that we are not a bunch of nutbags wallowing in the fever swamp? I’d like to think that our money would be kind of convincing.
Thanks for the explanation about state vs. federal races. I had wondered why it wasn’t possible to donate to Brian Keeler NY via ActBlue. Seems that is the explanation…?
Susan in Iowa @ 107
It absolutely matters! The link on Selden’s site is receiving contributions that the Spencer campaign is out there everyday soliciting through call-time, mailings, events, etc.
With a “Susan for Spencer” page, you can do something that Selden can’t…contact your friends and family with your personal reasons
for supporting Selden. Your contacts are going to donate because you asked them, you gave them your personal reasons for supporting Selden, and you kept calling them until they donated. A page of your own gives you a space to share your reasons for supporting the Selden campaign and an easy place to keep track of who gave (so you can thank those who contributed and continue hounding those that haven’t). If you’d like helping setting up a page or more specific tips about fundraising, please join our call on Thursday the 31st…we’ll walk you through the basics and get you started.
Ben — we were just talking about mailers this week; I know our treasurer said we’d pay $0.24 cents per piece for bulk mail rate, believe that was for a single piece of paper folded and stapled.
Add more, of course, for the paper, copying, folding, labeling.
For some reason, $0.21 sticks in my head for post cards – but that seems rather high.
Erin @ 67
Thanks for advice. I think we’ve got one up but will double check that. Just wandering if there are any other ways candidates like Selden Spencer use ActBlue- not only for contribs but to raise $
Zennurse (#128). It goes beyond that. An amazing number of candidates have become bloggers themselves. I interviewed Congressman Brad Miller (D-NC) a few days ago and he hates calling contributors and asking for money but he loves blogging. It fits his thoughtful (wonkish) personality. He’s our guest a week from today and you’ll see what I mean. But quite a few candidates have really taken to it whole-hog. And John Laesch is not only bloggin’ away, he’s got his brother blogging from Iraq!
Many thanks to Howie, Ben, Matt, and Erin — Act Blue Rocks!!!
I always do the 10% tip when I donate, but there have been times when it would be much easier if the system remembered all of my personal info. On more than one occasion, the toobz ate the data, and I had to start over — once it happened three times!!!
A Paypal remember me type function would definitely be a big help, and increase my spontaneous donations . . .
zennurse — I agree with your premise. The corporations and big donors have had the advantage for years in that for them constituency is not limited by geography.
Someday soon, some pundit will write a groundbreaking column that gets him (trust me, it will be a him) on all the talk shows which says: The biggest paradigm shift of the 2006 elections is that constituency is no longer bound by geography.
Everyone will ooh in amazement at the wisdom. But remember, we said it here first.
Ben, Erin
I’m looking at Bob Casey’s page. In the top right it says:
Across ActBlued 385 $10,879.97
but the detailed Fundraising Page doesn’t support that total.
What am I missing? The individual contibutors?
Erin, thank you. You folks are so passionate. It’s inspiring. And I do tip, because, like LindaR, I waited tables, and those little coins add up.
Valley Girl @ 129
Yup…we’re not yet active in New York state, so state candidates can’t yet fundraise through us.
We do link directly to Brian’s website, though…you can click the “contribute” button under his listing and give to him through his own site.
Ben Rahn @ 115
ahh, the soft spigotry of low
expectationsperformance….-ck- @ 134
Yup, I hear you :-) I can’t promise anything, but it’s certainly on our wish list of major feature additions.
Howie Klein @ 133
In that light, Charlie Brown has a diary up at Kos today that hit the number one recommend spot — and he didn’t even know what a blog was at the beginning of his campaign!
Nuts, I can’t get my hands on my training info. I attended a one-hour finance/fundraising review, remember seeing that calls were far more effective than mailers, and that in-person requests were even more so, but I can’t find the numbers.
Basically, people want to do something because of social pressure (in a good sense); mailers are impersonal and make it easy for people to ignore them.
Rayne at 142 — I’ve always heard that as well, although I have no data to back it up, it just comes from folks who have worked on all sorts of local campaigns. Personal discussions are always supposed to be more helpful.
ding777 @ 136
That’s probably it. A lot of potentional donors scan our directory and contribute to candidates right then and there. Those contributions go into the overall ActBlue-wide total, but since they weren’t raised via a specific page, they are not itemized in that detailed listing.
Also, users have the option of keeping their fundraising page private. So, it’s possible that some people who have fundraised for Bob on their page have chosen not to have their page remain private. But, it’s most likely individual donors contributing through our directory.
Rayne @ 142
Here’s the numbers that I have (courtesy of the good folks at Democratic GAIN):
* Face-to-face: 70% response rate
* Phone calls: 40-60%
* Direct Mail: 1-5%
They don’t have numbers for blast e-mail, but I think 1% is the right ballpark.
Yup — I’d break this down into two pieces: you have to ask personally and you have to ask directly. The personal piece is the one-to-one. The direct piece is asking someone in real time, e.g. in person or on the phone, where they can’t get away.
One piece of advice someone gave me about fundraising: make your ask (”Can I count on you for $50?”) and then…stop. Wait. And wait more. That uncomfortable silence forces the person you’re asking to give a solid yes or no, so use it to your advantage.
I was surprised at what a rush I felt the first time I asked people to contribute to a candidate (Charlie Brown, of course) and someone did!
Ben, Erin or Matt — are there some great fundraising stories that you have? I know Howie mentioned the offer of the top-secret brownie recipe to donors, but I bet you guys have some hilarious stories about campaign stuff.
LindaR @ 135
Just getting caught up on all the doings.
Everyone in California should read up on Prop 89 join the nurses and give it a big thumbs up and vote YES on Prop 89.
Luv ActBlue
LindaR @ 139
I remember meeting Charlie early on in his campaign after a labor meeting. I must have sounded rather like a broken record, as I urged him repeatedly to connect with the blogs and the netroots. I think I annoyed him a little. ;)
But no thanks to me, he and his staff have definitely made the leap – and I know, LindaR, that they all were very impressed with the fundraising you did for Charlie in the comments here a few weeks ago. But fundraising aside, I love seeing candidates blog. Just imagine how differently politicians and their constituents will communicate in the not-too-distant future!
Christy Hardin Smith @ 147
Hmmm… :-) We’re brainstorming here in the office…
Here’s one of my favorite pages, part of the two-weeks, $500,000 explosion for Paul Hackett in the special election OH-02
Ok, I kicked in a few bucks for Jan Schneider, who is running for the House seat Krazy Katherine Harris is vacating in her
meltdownSenate run. ActBlue is so easy!Is there a spot on ActBlue to donate to Florida Dem governor candidates? Or are all the candidates federal?
(BTW-Florida Dem candidates for governor are debating tonight at 8:00 on Florida PBS stations).
The Nefarious Leslie, in a more perfect union, every representative would keep a website and blog every day about what they did that day — the votes, the committee hearings, etc.
And what a sure-fired way of keeping your seat! It would be voter contact every day, you’d have the pulse of your district — you could drop having to dial for dollars.
Ben Rahn — thanks for those numbers, and yeah, those look a lot like the numbers I saw, based on recollection.
You also make a great point, almost like the old Xerox sale process:
- Pitch your product (in this case, present your candidate)
- Ask for questions (does the voter have concerns about the candidate’s qualifications or positions on issues)
- Overcome objections (respond to any concerns constructively)
- Close the sale by asking. (Ask for the contribution or other commitment to assist the campaign)
That last point is the kicker. Have that ActBlue page info handy!
cleter @
151
In additional to federal candidates, we’re set to support candidates for state office in eleven states (CA, IA, IN, ME, MT, OR, PA, SD, TX, UT, WI), and at least a couple more on the way in the next month.
Unfortunately, Florida isn’t in the cards for this cycle — it’s largely a function of where the campaign finance laws are favorable.
(If you’re interested in AZ, NM, NH, or TN, you can help out here!)
Oh well. It sure would be nice to have a Democratic governor and Secretary of State in Florida come 2008.
Christy Hardin Smith @ 147
Not so much hilarious, but inspiring:
Back in April, an activist in Utah named Cliff Lyon contacted us about activating ActBlue in Utah for state level candidates. We told him that we needed to raise $10,000 to make it happen and Cliff got to work.
He created a page to fundraise for “ActBlue Utah” and started soliciting contributions. His work got some candidates interested. The candidates kicked in some money and started fundraising to bring us to Utah. Their efforts engaged sitting Democratic legislators…they donated to the cause and started fundraising, too. That work got the Utah Democratic Party interested. The Utah Democratic Party helmed an email blast that brought in even more donations…then, the party literally “passed a hat” at one of their events to bring us up and over $10,000.
In the end, everyone from first time challengers to Utah candidates for federal office had contributed.
Now, we’re active in Utah and helping Utahn state and federal candidates, county parties, party caucuses, etc…
It was a total state-wide effort!
This question is specifically about the BlueAmerica page for FDL, C&L and DWT.
How are the candidates chosen and is there a system in place for people to submit recommendations? I think Patricia Madrid in NM is a wonderful and progressive candidate who’s got a real fighting chance to win would be a great addition but emails to John and Jane have gone unanswered so I was curious if there is some democractic process in place to recommend and/or vote on potential additions?
Rayne @ 71
I think the info you refer to would be at the Registrar of Voters office, not the county clerk’s office, but I could be wrong
this is all just a theory that I’m thinking of acting out. I made the comment positing the theory on the thread of a person who had tried to vollonteer at some of the places you listed and recieved no response
the precinct I described at DKOS doesn’t help us in the congressional races. It’s solidly Democratric in a safely gerrymandered Democratic seat. But I think the idea is sound if applied to similar precincts in repuglican districts.
I’m talking about an economically depressed neighborhood with mostly rental housing, and the past voter turnout totals are about 10% below the county average This particular precinct also suffers from the fact that the actual precinct site is somewhat hard to find (and I also understand why, so don’t argue about that)
by just walking this precinct a month before the election passing out registration forms, and walking thru with reminders a few days before the election, I think I could convince at least 50 non voting people to regiser and-or get them to vote in November
I’m currently waiting for some data about precincts in Richard Pombo’s district in San Joaquin County. I know the area, and I’d like to focus my efforts against that asshole instead of working for a safe Democrat. the places I’m thinking of working are pretty tough neighborhoods, and I don’t recommend that just anybody try this alone. If you feel compelled to try, i suggest you use the canvasing methods of the evangelicals; travel in groups of four or so (people might be glad you don’t wanna talk about God, so they”ll listen to anything)
this is just an idea I had, based upon the circumstances I noticed in a single precinct. Finding a similar set of circumstances can’t be that hard in any urban congressional district. Gerrymandering ain’t perfect, and certain neighborhoods are neglected for a reason. We need to find those neighborhoods and turn them against repuglicans
it’s a wholly “Outlaw” campaign, and I won’t actually be affiliated with any candidate, and I ain’t accepting any money from anybody or soliciting money FOR anybody
I ain’t gonna keep my prefences hidden though
call me a political pirate
Ben Rahn @ 150
I remember that.
He did us Texans right proud, too.
freepatriot @ 158
Aaargh, matey. Mind the parrot.
LindaR @ 150
Yeah. Imagine what’ll happen when our representatives can spend their time actually representing us. Of course that prospect terrifies a good many of the current officeholders, but the times they are a-changin’.
Ben Rahn @ 145
Ben, there’s a science to your madness.
Ben or Rayne have you ever read any studies by or articles on Robert Cialdini?
Off to watch Keith
L8r
boadicea @ 159
the parrot works on the kids
the hook really impresses the guys
and the ladies love the eye patch
I dont know what the hat and the peg leg do
Hey everyone — it’s 8pm here on the East Coast so Erin and I need to get out of here and find some food.
Don’t be strangers, though — we’re easy to get ahold of! You can always e-mail us (info@actblue.com) and please join us for our conference call next week:
It’s been fantastic talking with you, and thanks for all you do for these fantastic candidates!
The peg leg keeps you from falling down.
Ben, Erin and Matt — thanks SO much for coming to chat with us today. And thanks even more for the fabulous site!
Thanks Ben, Erin and Matt. This was very informative.
Ben and Matt make great ice cream too! don’t they?
Oh, and new thread, gang. :)
Thanks so much to all of you.
We are devoted.
Christy Hardin Smith @ 169
sorry, guess we kinda lost focus there at the end
we’ll try to better next time
(wink)
Ohhhh, almost forgot … if you’re thinking about a statewide candidate to support – Howie, Ben, Erin
Check out Rob Haswell, he’s one of the good guys in pretty much the same geographical district as Charlie Brown
http://www.robhaswellforassembly.com/
Just somebody to keep in mind …
Off to watch Keith
Mahalo
freepatriot — every state’s different; I know in my state (MI), precinct delegates are partisan and are selected during the primary (yay!! I got elected!! I’m a delegate for the first time!!). Sounds like your state is different; do whatever you have to do. Whatever the equivalent of a precinct delegate is in your state, that person or persons may have already lined up a schedule for door-to-door; would certainly help you if they already had all the resources lined up and all the numbers about your precinct.
In my case, our Dem club actively went and recruited delegates for each precinct; we have more than ever before. Some precincts are still underrepresented and they are generally like the precinct you described. Because we have plenty of delegates in my precinct, I’m going to work on the next one over that doesn’t have enough. It’s high density (lots of multiple family dwellings), votes more blue than the rest of the area, but has a low turnout (neighboring red precinct has a 75% turnout – ouch!). Any additional turnout will be a big help.
But that’s exactly what the DNC 50-State Strategy[PDF file] says; 5, 10, 15 more Dem votes in every precinct might be all it takes to win. Best of luck to you, keep us posted.
(And I’ll be promoting candidates’ ActBlue pages while I’m pounding the pavement.)
Dear ActBlue people and Howie–
Thanks so much for this powerful political tool. It has certainly gotten me to contribute many more times and directly to candidates.
Really easy the right candidates = a winner.
Much appreciated.
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