Why this gay Minnesotan will miss Michele Bachmann.
Both sides of the media aisle lit up on Wednesday after Congresswoman Michele Bachmann announced that she wouldn’t seek re-election. As a Minnesotan who’s closely watched her rise to office—often firsthand, I’m honestly glad to see her leave public office, and curious to see where she’ll land.
As a political consultant, I’m with the comedians and editorial cartoonists–I’ll be sorry to see her go.
Since her announcement, most of the accolades, criticisms and comedic pans at Michele Bachmann the public official or the candidate overlook some of her greatest strengths: she was an innovative campaigner and fundraiser.
Unlike many candidates, Bachmann never allowed her political consultants to suffer from path dependence—a psychological habit that puts faith in prior experience and past successes even when conditions have obviously changed. Like an entrepreneur, she sought out the opportunities and tools that often weren’t even applied in business, let alone the political world.
Her insatiable hunger for power required her to push technology when other campaigns were still struggling with the telegraph.
That drive helped her directly raise over $35.4 million over her political career—largely from small donors. It also helped her attack opponents well beyond their radar and competency to fight back…at a fraction of the cost of traditional media.
In 2006, the largely unknown Bachmann first used interactive tools—heavy banner advertising combined aggressive email efforts focused list building via third-party acquisition. She bested her better-known opponent by over 8 points.
After narrowing winning re-election by 3 points in 2008, Bachmann joined Twitter and Facebook. She eventually built a following of over 240,000 and 500,000 respectively. And years before many of her colleagues and detractors would post photos of them kissing babies, she incorporated video to cut funding for ACORN, surveyed supporters for talking points and actively converted Facebook “likes” into millions of donations.
During the 2010 mid-terms, her campaign first experimented with mobile. They used geo-targeted mobile ads during the Minnesota State Fair that painted her opponent as someone who “raise taxes on your corn dog and your deep-fried bacon and your beer.” She won by a generous 12.7 point spread.
And in the 2012 GOP Presidential Primaries, Bachmann pulled out all of the stops. They leveraged mobile web sites, SMS, Facebook mobile ads, social media and tightly geo-targeting mobile campaigns throughout Iowa and New Hampshire. The efforts earned her a win at the Iowa Straw Polls, and tactic adoption by the Romney campaign.
Eventually, Bachmann’s innovative efforts exceeded her capacity as a candidate—which might be a first in political campaigns. (Hadn’t that have happened, the political strategist in me would’ve savored the magic a Bachmann presidential would have created with access to $100s of millions.)
Instead of downplaying Bachmann the public official, political operatives would do better to learn from her as a campaigner. Her fellow tea partier Senator Ted Cruz did, but he’s an exception even on both sides of the aisle.
Like every mid-term, 2014 will be tougher campaign year for the party in power. Candidates should leverage innovative tactics that she’s proven effective.
-Curt Prins