FairvoteWRC meeting 2017-02-26

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2017 Campaign Tactics meeting

Held: Sunday, 26 February 2017 at St. John's Kitchen, 97 Victoria Ave. South
Event Notice: Fair Vote Waterloo Campaign Tactics meeting
Present: Sharon Sommerville, David Dirks, Rob Steel, Bob Jonkman, Donald Fraser, Cathe Campbell, Stuart Chandler, Cathy Scott, Ron Bowman
  • Introductions
  • Opening Comments
    • Sharon reads a quote from David Suzuki in iPolitics.ca
    • Two documents:
      • One theoretical: Indivisible
      • One practical: Pathways For Change
    • Objectives
      • Keep Electoral Reform top-of-mind
      • Not persuading Justin Trudeau
      • Differentiate Liberals and NDP
        • (ironclad guarantee of MMPR from NDP - more of a tactic than a strategy)
      • Punish every Liberal member in Parliament for breaking promise
      • Keep Electoral Reform alive and provide public education
      • Think of Electoral Reform as a pilot project (eg. Ted Kennedy and Medicare)
      • Put pressure on politicians
      • Recognize that Electoral Reform is an issue for many people, eg. Public Education
  • Discussion (Action Items)
    • 1: Pathways For Change
      • Theories:
        • Unlocking policy making process
        • Why some policies go forward and some don't
        • What works and what doesn't
        • What is successful advocacy
      • Policy Windows
        • Policies need to be seen as technically feasible
        • Policy makers must be interested
      • Electoral Reform no longer meets the needs of the Liberal Party (a majority government)
      • How a problem is defined makes a difference in the attention it gets
        • Redefine the issue to suit the politicians
        • Redefine the issue to suit the electorate
        • Redefine the issue in the public mind
      • "Liberals don't care about you"
      • Issue definition is important
        • to Politicians?
        • to the Public?
        • to the Community?
      • Make friends within the media
        • Change the message -- we can't buy enough media coverage to counter Liberal media budget
      • "Find anger, work on that."
      • Campaigning on fear?
        • Liberals control the message
      • Contact the media every time we do something good
      • Build relationships with politicians
        • and other community groups
      • Keep balance:
        • Groups are rational
        • Individuals are radical
      • Message: Strategic voting doesn't have to be true
      • In all contacts be respectful and polite (important!)
      • Make linkages: What's in it for me? "Electoral Reform fixes everything"
      • Trump appeal based on fear and anger (effective!)
      • Need to connect on an emotional level
      • Every policy issue: "The solution is Proportional Representation"
      • Hope Spring (counselling for cancer patients) is closed!
        • Example of a social issue
        • Our letters to politicians can address that issue
        • This issue can be addressed by more balanced represenation
      • Step up our letter writing campaign to include broader issues
      • Reach out to other communities (KWPeace?)
      • Call in to call-in shows
        • Phone the editors, producers of shows about Electoral Reform
      • How to find the MPs' schedules?
      • Buy a new event banner (ask Laurel Russwurm to design?)
      • List all issues affected by Proportional Representation on banner
        • Income inequality
        • Fossil fuel divestment
        • etc.
      • Print business cards with issues affected by PR
      • Greatest link between effective government and Proportional Representation
        • "Best decisions are made by groups that are the most diverse"
        • This can win over a conservative thinker
      • Cathe wrote 50 Christmas cards to Bloc, NDP, Conservatives: "Please support Electoral Reform"
        • Response: 1 return card from Thomas Mulcair (NDP)
      • Liberals selling memberships
        • Swamping the vote for policy issues
    • 2: Indivisible: Core Strategies for Influencing Politicians
      • More than calls and petitions