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9780743224468

Run the Other Way : Fixing the Broken Two-Party System, One Race at a Time

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780743224468

  • ISBN10:

    0743224469

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2004-03-30
  • Publisher: Free Press
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Summary

Bill Hillsman is simply, in the words of Slate.com, "the world's greatest political adman." With his groundbreaking consulting work on Paul Wellstone's senatorial, Jesse Ventura's gubernatorial, and Ralph Nader's presidential campaigns, he was the first to publicly challenge the conventional strategies of political campaigns, the inefficiency of campaign spending, the desultory, banal, and insulting political ads. As Hillsman says, "I don't believe you can annoy someone into voting for your candidate."

Hillsman first rocked the political establishment during Wellstone's 1990 Senate bid, with witty, sharp political ads that had audiences glued to their television sets and talking about the commercials for weeks afterward. In the end, he helped Wellstone overcome a $7 million campaign spending disadvantage to win the election. And the risk taking continued when he ran Jesse Ventura's Reform Party gubernatorial and Ralph Nader's Green Party presidential campaigns. In one Nader ad, a child looks out at the viewer and says, "When I grow up, I want politicians to ignore me." In an ad from Ventura's campaign, a boy playing with a Jesse Ventura action figure ("New, from the Reform Party!") takes on Ventura's voice to growl, "I don't want your stupid money!" With bold and brilliant ads like these, Hillsman helped two underdog candidates become senator and governor, transformed Minnesota politics, and showed the country that it has viable and appealing options outside of the two major parties.

Run the Other Way offers fascinating and disturbing insights into the shadowy, cronyistic world of political consulting: the grossly overpaid consultants, incompetent and inaccurate pollsters, fundraisers who take a dollar for every dollar they raise, and strategists who use negative advertising to intentionally keep people from voting. But it also gives us a from-the-trenches look at how Americans can turn the weapons trained on us back against the master propagandists, and in so doing revitalize our badly damaged democracy. Fleshing out his case with real-life stories from his involvement in numerous campaigns, Hillsman takes us behind the electioneering scenes of old Washington hands and trouble-making independents, including Ross Perot, Warren Beatty, John McCain, Arianna Huffington, and Colin Powell.

An outsider with an insider's vantage point, Hillsman sees America at a crucial historical moment defined by the continuing decline of both major political parties and the rise of independent voters. Edgy, controversial, and often humorous, his political ads have energized voters and revolutionized election campaigning over the last fifteen years. This is a book for everyone who's ever run for office, thought about running for office, or voted for someone running for office. Run the Other Way investigates the many imperfections in the greatest system of government in the world and challenges all of us to make it better.

Bill Hillsman is simply, in the words of Slate.com, "the world's greatest political adman." With his groundbreaking consulting work on Paul Wellstone's senatorial, Jesse Ventura's gubernatorial, and Ralph Nader's presidential campaigns, he was the first to publicly challenge the conventional strategies of political campaigns, the inefficiency of campaign spending, the desultory, banal, and insulting political ads. As Hillsman says, "I don't believe you can annoy someone into voting for your candidate."

Hillsman first rocked the political establishment during Wellstone's 1990 Senate bid, with witty, sharp political ads that had audiences glued to their television sets and talking about the commercials for weeks afterward. In the end, he helped Wellstone overcome a $7 million campaign spending disadvantage to win the election. And the risk taking continued when he ran Jesse Ventura's Reform Party gubernatorial and Ralph Nader's Green Party presidential campaigns. In one Nader ad, a child looks out at the viewer and says, "When I grow up, I want politicians to ignore me." In an ad from Ventura's campaign, a boy playing with a Jesse Ventura action figure ("New, from the Reform Party!") takes on Ventura's voice to growl, "I don't want your stupid money!" With bold and brilliant ads like these, Hillsman helped two underdog candidates become senator and governor, transformed Minnesota politics, and showed the country that it has viable and appealing options outside of the two major parties.

Run the Other Way offers fascinating and disturbing insights into the shadowy, cronyistic world of political consulting: the grossly overpaid consultants, incompetent and inaccurate pollsters, fundraisers who take a dollar for every dollar they raise, and strategists who use negative advertising to intentionally keep people from voting. But it also gives us a from-the-trenches look at how Americans can turn the weapons trained on us back against the master propagandists, and in so doing revitalize our badly damaged democracy. Fleshing out his case with real-life stories from his involvement in numerous campaigns, Hillsman takes us behind the electioneering scenes of old Washington hands and trouble-making independents, including Ross Perot, Warren Beatty, John McCain, Arianna Huffington, and Colin Powell.

An outsider with an insider's vantage point, Hillsman sees America at a crucial historical moment defined by the continuing decline of both major political parties and the rise of independent voters. Edgy, controversial, and often humorous, his political ads have energized voters and revolutionized election campaigning over the last fifteen years. This is a book for everyone who's ever run for office, thought about running for office, or voted for someone running for office. Run the Other Way investigates the many imperfections in the greatest system of government in the world and challenges all of us to make it better.

Author Biography

Bill Hillsman is CEO and Chief Creative Officer of North Woods Advertising.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsp. xi
Introductionp. xv
Election Industry, Inc.p. 1
Wellstone 1990p. 5
Political Advertising vs. Real Advertisingp. 25
Effective Political Campaigningp. 45
The Unbearable Dumbness of Pollingp. 51
People for Perot 1992p. 63
Wellstone 1996p. 77
Getting Under Your Opponent's Skinp. 93
Negative Campaigning and Rapid Responsep. 99
Let Them Stay Homep. 107
DFL Gubernatorial Primary 1998p. 113
Ventura for Governor 1998p. 123
Secrets of Three-Breakfast Pollingp. 145
My Dinner with Warren and Annettep. 149
Presidential Folliesp. 161
Nader 2000p. 181
Third Parties in Americap. 203
The Internet and Politicsp. 209
Money in Politics and How to Overcome Itp. 221
Looking Forward and Moving Aheadp. 237
Afterwordp. 253
Indexp. 259
Table of Contents provided by Rittenhouse. All Rights Reserved.

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Excerpts

INTRODUCTION These are notes from the underground of American politics.As much as I love Aaron Sorkin's televised portrayal of politics, The West Wing, it presents an unrealistic, idealized picture of our government. The reality is much closer to The Sopranos -- escapades in raw ambition, with professional political hit men operating in the shadows and out of the public's view to maintain a vise-like grip on political power and to eliminate any threats to the two political parties' profitable business territories.When you work for rebel, underdog candidates, like I do, even the occasional victory is one success too many as far as the established political firmament is concerned. By telling the truth about the current state of our politics, I've managed to antagonize both major political parties and make enemies of practically all the practitioners of politics in Washington, D.C.For nearly fifteen years now, what I call Election Industry, Inc. has tried to put me out of commission. Beyond the whisper campaigns, the character assassinations, and the political backstabbings, I've put up with hate mail, broken windows, and menaces to my personal safety. As many of the candidates I've worked with realize, when you threaten the system, you get threatened.Maybe a smarter person would just give up.But you and I and those few brave candidates willing to challenge the existing system can't afford to give up. If we check out of the system (to slightly alter the phrase heard often from America's commander in chief), the political terrorists win.This book is not just a memoir from memory. It is also a handbook for the new, developing political landscape, full of ways and means by which we still can win.Within these pages, you'll discover: How political parties control candidates, and why it's hard for good people to run for office anymore How big money negatively influences our politics, and how to win without it What political advertising can learn from commercial advertising, and how campaigns can more effectively develop messages and communicate with citizens How political professionals use negative advertising to intentionally hold down voter turnout, and the best ways to respond Why the two major political parties persist in shutting out new candidates, new parties, new viewpoints, and new ideas -- despite the fact that Americans are clearly looking for more choices and that America has a long-standing tradition of multiparty elections How to analyze and evaluate (the mostly worthless) political pollsIf a Paul Wellstone or a Russ Feingold can still be elected to the United States Senate, then eliminating child poverty in America or providing comprehensive health care to all our citizens is not an impossible dream. If a former professional wrestler can prove that the American Dream is still alive by becoming governor of our 21st-most-populated state, then getting elected is not beyond any citizen's grasp.We have to keep challenging our own political system in order to make it all that it can be. That is the essence of participative democracy. We can't do what the power brokers of Election Industry, Inc. want us to do -- grow discouraged, give up, and drop out.After more than 225 years as a nation, it's too late to stop now. Copyright 2004 by William G. Hillsman Chapter 1: Election Industry, Inc. Americans own the greatest political system in the world. It works wonderfully well for everyone involved, except two groups of people:Voters. And candidates.Political parties, pollsters, political consultants, fundraisers, media mavens, junk mailers, spammers, special interest groups, lobbyists, and various other meretricious sorts all profit handsomely from our current political system.Who pays for it?

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