Results tagged “elections”

Support Canvassing and GOTV (Get Out The Vote) functionality in CiviCRM

This in late last week (while I was on the mend from some serious food poisoning... thanks Peru!) from Donald Lobo and the CiviCRM team:

Hey folks:

We are trying to raise some sponsorship $$$ to build canvassing and get out of the vote support in CiviCRM. Seems like we've got a good combination of folks who are interested in working with us to develop it. We've got an excellent start from some seed funders, and need a few more funders to meet our goals. If the above is of interest to you or your clients, please consider helping out. You can make your donation here :)

The complete specification is on the the wiki: CiviCRM for Canvassing and GOTV

This requirement has been probably been the #1 reason that many of the electoral campaigns that I've supported in the past couldn't get good mileage out of CiviCRM. There was no easy way to do the usual canvassing and get out of the vote activities right inside of CiviCRM. Sure, it was hackable with custom fields and custom reports, but it never worked as well as it could have. If you've had similar experiences, this is your chance to fix that.

Why not sponsor some of the development, or commit some developer hours to help out?

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Looking for F/OSS software to manage voter lists, and GOTV efforts

I have a friend up here in the Great White North who is in search of open-source software that would help with documenting voter intent and "get out the vote" (GOTV) efforts. Given that this friend is a CiviCRM consultant, I would guess that's already on the list (or off the list). Maybe you've seen something out there recently that is similar to what AdvoKit was trying to do? Ideally, the software:

  • Would handle at least 6 contacts with voters (doorstep, phone, etc).
  • Could be extended into some kind of virtual call centre that would allow individuals to do phoning according to a script.
  • Should also be able to produce walk-lists for GOTV efforts.

Wondering if any of you blog readers have recent experience with this type of software? If you might know what is being used by major campaigns? Or might know someone that worked on a campaign that I might be able to pop a note off to?

Feel free to leave a comment here, or to pop me a note directly at simplicity at communitybandwidth dot ca.

Many thanks in advance,

Phillip.

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2 Comments

Ditto ditto...

I *don't* know of anyone doing this, but I'd also really like to hear if there are any solutions moving towards decent usability -- can you post here if you come across anything?

Hey there Ian,
I'm starting


Hey there Ian,

I'm starting to compile responses from a few sources that I've sent this question to, so I'll be sure to report back here. And, if you here of anything on your end, please pop a note back too. :-)

Phillip.

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Civic Data Wants to be Free!

If what Tim O'Reilly says is right -- that "Data is the next Intel Inside" -- then civil society better get moving or they'll be left running last year's technology.

Online advocacy options in the US are plentiful; Democracy in Action, ActionStudio, GetActive -- the list goes on-and-on. However, in Canada, NGOs have always struggled to integrate even the most basic functionality -- like sending e-mails to an elected official -- into their campaigns.

Why is that? Well, as discussed before, Statistics Canada and other similar groups hold the "crown copyright" on the basic data needed to make online advocacy effective. Want to look up your Federal Electoral District via your Postal Code? Nuh-ah: can't do that unless you've licensed an expensive data set and signed a restrictive contract about how you can (or, in this case, can't) use it.

Well, I'm happy to announce that -- thanks to the efforts of Mike Gifford and Russell McOrmond -- a solution is not far away!

Last week Mike, Russell, and I sent out an invitation to a number of our clients, colleagues, and NGOs and unions across the country asking them to join Canada's first "Electoral Data Consortium." Over the next few weeks, as members sign-on, I'll post updates on the progress toward a new Web service that will deliver civic data to member organizations, and manage all the work of keeping it online, updated, and evolving to meet the needs of the consortium members. (Interested in joining? Just pop me a note via the contact form or comments.)

This comes right on the heels of a similar announcement that benefits organizations in the US from the fine folks at CiviCRM and The Sunlight Foundation (read their announcement past the jump):

If your blog runs on the popular content management Drupal and the community management tool CiviCRM, you'll be pleased to learn the CivicCRM development team is going to make it easier to connect your members to their elected officials with some help from the SunlightLabs API. (Sunlight Labs is a project of the Sunlight Foundation which prototypes tech ideas to improve government transparency and political influence disclosure.)

The SunlightLabs API is a tool for developers that provides handy, machine-readable information about members of Congress. Developers can use the API to more easily look up key information about representatives from different online databases and to find the representatives for a given zip code or state. Since developers have to spend less time managing clerical data around representatives, they can spend more time presenting that information in useful ways to you and I. In this case, CiviCRM developers will be incorporating the data directly into the CiviCRM interface and modules. As David Geilhufe pointed out in an email to us, "People could automatically email all the people in the database within a particular district."

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