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Political Communications

Political Communications

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Political Communications. Political Communications is the art and s cience of influencing public opinion for political purposes. There are 4 basic rules for effective communications:. 1) Work for a candidate or cause you believe in. 2) Speak the voters’ language – choose narrative over lists. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Political Communications

Political Communications

Page 2: Political Communications

Political Communications is the art and science of influencing public opinion for political

purposes.

Page 3: Political Communications

There are 4 basic rules for effective communications:

Page 4: Political Communications

1) Work for a candidate or cause you believe in.

Page 5: Political Communications

2) Speak the voters’ language – choose narrative over lists

Page 6: Political Communications

3) Communicate your candidate’s views in a clear, consistent, articulate,

and truthful manner.

Page 7: Political Communications

4) Without brevity and relevance, there is no message.

Page 8: Political Communications

Message Grid:

What we say about ourselves

What our opponents say about themselves

What we say about our opponent

What our opponent says about us

Page 9: Political Communications

Senator Smith is a Liberal Democrat and Congressman Rodriguez is a Conservative

Republican.

Break into small groups by ideology and produce

message grids for your side of this race.

You have 8 minutes.

Page 10: Political Communications

3-9-27

An abbreviated message comprising three main

points, requiring 9 seconds to say, and composed of 27

words or less.

Page 11: Political Communications

In your existing groups, using your message grids, construct 3-9-27 messages for Senator

Smith and Congressman Rodriguez. You have 8 minutes.

Page 12: Political Communications

The media is not your friend. They will not cover their stories in a way that furthers your political objectives.

Don’t say anything in public or to a reporter you would not want to see quoted on TV.

Page 13: Political Communications

If asked a question by the media, rephrase the

question in a way that speaks to your message. Do not allow the media person to dictate the terms of the

interview.

Page 14: Political Communications

If you develop trust with a media person, try telling

them something minor “off the record.” If they respect the rules, use those rules to

give the media person heads up notice of future

campaign actions or statements.

Page 15: Political Communications

Break into pairs from opposing groups and practice asking and answering questions

“on message.” After four minutes, reverse roles.

Page 16: Political Communications

Prepare for debates by staging mock debates, making them as difficult as possible. During

debates, do not permit your opponent to frame the terms. After the debate, the

communications team will attempt to spin it to shape media coverage, placing the candidate in

the best possible light.

Page 17: Political Communications

With discipline, focus, and teamwork, anybody can beat anybody.

Page 18: Political Communications

Rob Field

[email protected]

(386) 232-8336