In the early 1980’s I was working for a community organizing when Ronald Reagan came into office and did a good job of de-funding much community organizing.  Up until that time, most community organizers (and community organizations) had steered totally clear of being involved in electoral politics – mostly because we thought it was too corrupt. But Reagan's election was a wake up call, and we started sniffing around the edges of electoral politics. 

 

One day Paul Tully, (of blessed memory now), who had worked for the late Senator Kennedy and other Democrats, came to give us a training session.  He was the Irish politico out of central casting, brash, extroverted, with a big belly.  “I don’t know or understand what you guys do,” he said bluntly.  Then he went on to explain his business: getting people elected.

 

Up until that time I thought electoral politics were about what I had read in the papers: about polling, numbers, advertisements, speeches, and personalities, including celebrities like the Kennedys.  But Tully said something that gave me a whole new perspective.  He said, “You want people to talk about your candidate the way they talk about movies.  You want them to recommend your candidate like they recommend a movie.” 

 

“How do you decide what movie you are going to see?” he asked us.  Almost all of us said we see movies on recommendations of friends.

“It is the same with candidates and elections.  You want the movie conversation to be about your candidate.  You want one friend to recommend it to another friend.  Just like you recommend a good movie.”

 

Wow.  That was different.  Now, as we have a special election to replace Senator Kennedy in Massachusetts, we have at least four candidates running in the Democratic primary.  One friend is working for one candidate.  Someone else I know is supporting another candidate.  It looks like this election is going to be won on the movie conversation, or a lot of them.  The primary election happens on December 8, not a popular date for voting.  It will be cold, maybe snowing.  The turn-out will not be like the turnout in a Presidential election.  I don’t go to a lot of movies these days. But I think this election is going to be like choosing a good movie.  Who will I listen to?  Who will win?  Probably the candidate whose supporters have the most movie conversations.