• On CBSNews.com: Weigh in on 60 Min/Vanity Fair Poll
February 13, 2009 1:54 PM PST

GOP tries to rebuild brand with technology

by Stephanie Condon
  • Font size
  • Print
  • 6 comments

RNC Chairman Michael Steele said at Friday's RNC Tech Summit that the GOP needs to make better use of technology.

(Credit: Stephanie Condon/ CNET Networks)

WASHINGTON--The GOP doesn't have a technology problem, Republicans insisted Friday--it has an image problem.

Since Barack Obama deftly used new media and social networks to build unprecedented online support and win the presidency last year, the Republican party has been fighting to catch up to Democrats' use of technology.

"When we get to 2010, I want my campaigns here," Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele said as he held up his cell phone at the party's Tech Summit on Friday. "I want whatever we're doing to be within my thumb's reach. We don't want to just do what Obama did in '08--that's the floor."

Steele organized the Tech Summit, held at the party's swanky Capitol Hill Club, to field ideas from anyone willing to share about how the Republican party could make better use of technology.

Yet even though the party has a lesser presence online, its bigger problem is the lack of an inclusive, inspiring message, prominent party leaders and local activists said at the event. The party must decide on a message, they said, and then worry about how to use technology to communicate that message.

"What really matters in the long run is what you communicate, not how you communicate," said former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.

Democrats had a technological advantage in the 2008 elections because "San Jose and San Francisco is a liberal area," he said. More importantly, though, he said Democrats had the support of "a group of millionaires who hated Bush (and) a country mad about the war and (Hurricane) Katrina."

Republicans, he said, need to focus on popular ideas like the flat tax.

"This is not about outreach, this is about inclusion," Gingrich said.

Inside the Capitol Hill Club, an elegant townhouse a block from the Capitol that serves as RNC headquarters, party activists and platform developers took turns pitching ideas for using new media to communicate with voters. Just as many people, however, took the time to lament the party's lack of a message.

"You can blog about blogging and Twitter about Twittering, but what we've been experiencing is a failure of our brand."
--Sean Doughtie, CEO of Taproot Creative

"Technology alone is not the answer to our problems," said Sean Doughtie, the CEO of Taproot Creative, an advertising and new media agency that has done work for the Florida Republican party.

"You can blog about blogging and Twitter about Twittering, but what we've been experiencing is a failure of our brand," Doughtie said, standing at a podium in front of a glass case display of elephant figurines.

Some presenters said the Republican party's lack of technological savvy was overstated.

Mindy Finn, a co-founder of RebuildTheParty.com, said she was optimistic the party could embrace technology because of its past experience. The goal of RebuildTheParty is to build an online grassroots campaign for the GOP.

"Despite what the press says, we actually had an e-campaign in 2004 that did many of the things the Obama campaign did," Finn said. "They just did it with many more people."

The 2004 election, however, took place at a time when Facebook was still an exclusive site for universities and YouTube didn't exist. In the 2008 presidential election, Barack Obama had 90 people working on his new media campaign while John McCain had four.

Developers at Friday's event shared ways to bring the GOP back up to speed. The company First Tuesday in November pitched its tracking technology that tells a campaign in real time when their supporters have voted.

Danny Allen, the managing director for the interactive ad agency Sensis, talked about using mobile ads to contact hard to reach audiences like minority groups.

Brian Williams, a vice president for the political data management firm Aristotle, suggested integrating back-end databases with front-end technology to allow developers to create their own tools to reach out to constituencies.

Some developers pitched ways to improve the party's use of technology while also improving its message. Even developing iPhone applications that parody Obama would be a step in the right direction, said Internet marketing strategist Jon Friesch.

"It's something people can laugh at," he said. "Then you start laying the groundwork for changing people's hearts and minds."

Stephanie Condon is a staff writer for CNET News focused on the intersection of technology and politics. She is based in Washington, D.C. E-mail Stephanie.
Recent posts from Politics and Law
'Kill Obama' Facebook group active for a month
'Don't-be-evil' Google spurns no-evil software
White House appoints cybersecurity chief
U.S. cap and trade looks out of reach in 2010
FTC's new strategy: Kick 'em when they're down
Plurk holding Microsoft's feet to code-copying fire
FTC wants Intel to mend its ways
Biden to unveil $2 billion in broadband grants
Add a Comment (Log in or register) (6 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
by davemesaaz February 13, 2009 9:09 PM PST
The Republican party needs to rebrand itself in a economic libertarians. They should not be the party of big business but the party of free minds and free markets...

After the McCain's New Hampshire primary victory in 2000 McCain used the internet to collect thousands of dollars overnight. It was an idea that was ahead of its time...
Reply to this comment
by RighteousSoutherner February 14, 2009 8:48 AM PST
Agreed Davemessaz! Free market is the best approach for American and always has been. Obama will try to move us in the opposite direction with European style socialism, no doubt.
by scdecade February 14, 2009 6:44 AM PST
In this case it IS the message and NOT the medium. You can't polish a turd.
Reply to this comment
by Erictheruler1 February 14, 2009 11:16 AM PST
Amen to that beavis..
by shane--2008 February 14, 2009 8:26 AM PST
They have a message, it is "Tax cuts for the rich and screw the rest of you! Now lets invade a country for no reason and kill people!"

We all got that message. For eight long years.
Reply to this comment
by michaelo1966 February 14, 2009 12:35 PM PST
The message comes through loud and clear. Republicans stand for a dictatorship devoid of individual liberties where the many have an obligation to support the few, where billionaires deserve welfare without accountability to paid for by everybody else, where government is sold to the highest bidders who are then invited to write laws, where abuse of power is the rule rather than the exception, where you "win" (with winning being defined as concentrating power, not advancing any particular agenda) at any cost, and where party loyalty trumps all.

Democrats have issues too but the Republican Party has essentially become the Confederate Congress reincarnated, with Senators from tiny states using and abusing procedural rules to play dictators to the majority. They're like a drunk driver who believes the problem isn't how they're driving, but how everybody else fails to steer clear of them. Until Republicans realize it isn't the delivery of the message, but the message itself -- and that we're watching their behavior, not their words -- they'll do nothing but shrink in numbers and influence.
Reply to this comment
(6 Comments)
  • prev
  • 1
  • next
advertisement

Five New Year's resolutions for Google

Stakes are high as Google attempts to maintain one of the Internet's greatest cash machines while pushing into new and risky markets.
• Android event set for Jan. 5

For eBay sellers, a holiday hamster hangover

The gift frenzy over Zhu Zhu Pets leaves some power sellers feeling like they've just run a marathon--but the steep price tags lead to some impressive profits.

About Politics and Law

News at the intersection of technology, politics, and law, ranging from intellectual property to censorship to tech policy.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Politics and Law topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right