Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I'm doing some research on the 2004 campaign in relation to party ID and party strategies, but I've run into a little brick wall.

 

I'm trying to find a breakdown of ads by state and then by type. For example:

 

----------

Florida

----------

 

John Kerry

------------

100 ads on Iraq War/Terrorism

90 ads on Social Security

80 ads on Integrity

80 ads on Social Security

 

George W. Bush

------------

100 ads on Iraq War/Terrorism

90 ads on Social Security

80 ads on Integrity

80 ads on Social Security

 

 

 

I have thus far been unable to find this information. My ultimate goal is to use this data with Party ID data broken down by state (which I have) and top issues during the 2004 campaign (by party ID) to see what the campaigns targeted and how effective this advertising was.

 

Anyway, if anyone knows where I can find this information, I would appreciate it. :devil:

Posted

If you need help from a marketing perspective and how advertising influences consumers (or in this example, voters) let me know.

 

 

I'm doing some research on the 2004 campaign in relation to party ID and party strategies, but I've run into a little brick wall.

 

I'm trying to find a breakdown of ads by state and then by type.  For example:

 

----------

Florida

----------

 

John Kerry

------------

100 ads on Iraq War/Terrorism

90 ads on Social Security

80 ads on Integrity

80 ads on Social Security

 

George W. Bush

------------

100 ads on Iraq War/Terrorism

90 ads on Social Security

80 ads on Integrity

80 ads on Social Security

I have thus far been unable to find this information.  My ultimate goal is to use this data with Party ID data broken down by state (which I have) and top issues during the 2004 campaign (by party ID) to see what the campaigns targeted and how effective this advertising was.

 

Anyway, if anyone knows where I can find this information, I would appreciate it.  :devil:

376105[/snapback]

Posted
Are you including a section for 'issue ads' paid for by special interests (and who they were wink-wink-hint-hint supporting)?

376342[/snapback]

 

Good point. You need to analyze the impact of 527's on the campaigns. The candidate does not need to spend as much money on ads, since they have other organizations doing their work for them. Those other organizations can also be more aggressive in their advertising message, whereas the candidate needs to be more subdued.

Posted

My focus right now for what I'm doing is on how each candidate decided to spend their money. The 527s are a part of it, but I want to see who exactly the candidate targeted in this situation.

×
×
  • Create New...