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By Sasha Issenberg
"How political campaigns have mastered marketing tools to profile the
electorate. In his second book, Monocle Washington correspondent
Issenberg (The Sushi Economy: Globalization and the Making of a Modern
Delicacy, 2007) incorporates his experiences covering the 2008 election
for the Boston Globe. He provides anecdotes gleaned from interviews with
leading political consultants and a historical overview of the
integration of computer technology and behavioral psychology into social
marketing, and he traces the increasing sophistication of modern
campaigns to the Kennedy campaign. Confronting prejudice against
Catholics, JFK's advisors recommended tackling the issue head-on after
subdividing the electorate into specific demographic categories.
Issenberg explores the parallel development of the application of
behavioral psychology and the recognition that many voting decisions are
heavily influenced by emotion rather than rational choice. He tracks
the influence of a group of academics from top universities like Yale,
who influenced the shape of the modern election campaigns. They
developed a finely tuned approach to profiling voters by using a series
of criteria such as the magazines they subscribe to, the liquor they
drink and their answers to surveys with loaded questions intended to
reveal biases. An integral part of this process involved breaking down
the population into subcategories--rather than looking at whether
precincts customarily vote for a specific party--and directing targeted
messages to them, as well as exposing different population clusters to
different messages in order to scientifically determine response
patterns. This enables an election campaign to efficiently micromanage
get-out-the-vote operations in order to focus on the most likely voters
for its candidate. Issenberg illuminates how modern elections exploit
marginal advantages..." (Kirkus Reviews)
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