Bwog editor Lydia DePillis is finally back from Kentucky, with one last report.
LOUISVILLE, Ky.--The day Kentucky democrats had been awaiting for over four years dawned bright and cold. A poll the night before had their candidate up 29 points, with most other ticket members leading by similar margins.
But election day is about bodies—on the street, on the phones, at the polls--and the Louisville campaign came in sadly short on that count. They'd managed to recruit only 160 volunteers instead of their expected 400, and so the Columbia Dems arrived in Louisville (the biggest city in Kentucky, and a union stronghold) at about 9:30 AM, ready to roust the elderly out of their beds and to their polling places.
For the duration of their time in Frankfort, the Dems had politely butted heads with the campaign's field staff, and complained in private about their incompetence: the woman in charge sent canvassers to areas that had already been covered, kept the group waiting for hours, and generally micromanaged where the students were used to autonomy. "Its embarrassing for us to watch," said Dems board member Kate Redburn, CC '10.
One of the staffers also asked non-traditional student Jake Matilsky, GS '09, to ferry a large box of whiskey to a consultant in Louisville, noting that she'd "never work in politics again" if it didn't arrive safely.
"I felt like there was a trust thing between her and the e-board," Matilsky said.
This time, the activists weren't bound by the instructions of the Frankfort field staff, and the sense of relief was obvious.