It is proposed that this article be deleted because of the following concern:
If you can address this concern by improving, copyediting, sourcing, renaming, or merging the page, please edit this page and do so. You may remove this message if you improve the article or otherwise object to deletion for any reason. Although not required, you are encouraged to explain why you object to the deletion, either in your edit summary or on the talk page. If this template is removed, do not replace it . The article may be deleted if this message remains in place for seven days, i.e., after 01:41, 9 August 2025 (UTC). Find sources: "California Victory 2006" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR Nominator: Please consider notifying the author/project: {{ subst:proposed deletion notify |California Victory 2006|concern=Tagged as Unreferenced for almost 12 years. One part of one campaign is not notable. Fails [[WP:NPOL]].}} ~~~~ |
Another editor has reviewed this page's proposed deletion , endorses the proposal to delete, and adds: If you remove the {{proposed deletion/dated}} tag above, please also remove this {{Proposed deletion endorsed}} tag. |
Victory 2006 was a joint Get out the vote (GOTV) project between the California Republican Party and Californians for Schwarzenegger, with the intent of re-electing Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and electing the entire Republican slate of candidates during the California gubernatorial election, 2006.
The Victory program was the brainchild of President Bush' former advisor, Matthew Dowd, who was looking to assemble the largest GOTV effort ever attempted in a single state. The final product consisted of over 70,000 volunteers & 48 VoIP phone centers placed in targeted locations throughout California.
Each of the 48 offices was given names of potential supporters that needed to be contacted. These names were determined by party registration, any by microtargeting potential non-partisan supporters.
Approximately $20 – 25 million was spent on the Victory 06 program. This amount was spent on budgeting & supplies for 48 offices, VoIP technology & microtargeted data.
"For $20 million, which is what the Team Arnold-led Victory ‘06 program is costing. What that not so small fortune has bought is a state-of-the-art computerized telecommunications system, highly sophisticated “data mining” to enable “micro targeting” of potential supporters, and a cadre of some 75 staffers working for the Republican Victory ‘06 and Schwarzenegger campaign operations. Beginning last spring, working outward through concentric circles of core Republican activists and Schwarzenegger admirers to entirely new people, this group set about the task of recruiting 90,000 volunteers to work, at various stages of the campaign up through election day get out the vote operations, a universe of some 1.5 million voters."
Bill Bradley - New West Notes, October 10, 2006
Each office consisted of a T1 line, as well as 40 VoIP phone lines. The VoIP technology allowed Victory 06 to accurately track the amount of phone calls made from each location with real time statistics.
The offices also consisted of call sheets that were used by volunteers. Each sheet had information that would be filled out by the volunteer & scanned back into the Victory 06 system, which would then be updated in real-time.
The main focus of each Victory office was to have all 40 phone lines filled with volunteers making phone calls & reaching out to potential voters. Each of the 48 offices had varying levels of success with volunteer recruitment. Governor Schwarzenegger's soaring poll numbers led to a decrease in the urgency to volunteer.
The Victory '06 program has come under fire after Election Day, as Conservative Republicans were displeased by the fact that only one other Republican besides Schwarzenegger was elected. Steve Poizner was easily elected to the position of Insurance Commissioner.
A list of all of the Victory offices with their accompanying field director.
Location | Director |
---|---|
Alameda | Ted Jackson |
Antelope Valley | Israel Ifeanyichukwu |
Butte | Steve Thompson |
Camarillo | Ray Grangoff |
Carlsbad | Melissa Young |
Orange | Julian Babbitt |
Contra Costa | Gerry Lynam |
Covina | Sunana Batra |
Diamond Bar | Martha McGrath |
Escondido | Bryan Watkins |
Folsom | Rebekah Anderson |
Fresno | Tal Eslick |
Huntington Beach | Kathryn Staczek |
Irvine | Barrett Tetlow |
Kern | Glenn Rodgers |
Lake Forest | Louis Bronstein |
Long Beach | Kevin Gilhooley |
Merced | Dean Anderson |
Mission Valley | Dan Centinello |
Modesto | Jaclyn Gonzales |
Mountain View | Jenniffer Rodriguez |
Palm Desert | Bob Olsson |
Pasadena | Bo Patatian |
Placentia | Mike Johnson |
Placer | Jim Stracner |
Redlands | Jennifer Betancourt |
Riverside | David Morgan |
Sacramento | Scott Scheid |
San Diego | Josh Grodin |
San Francisco | George Andrews |
San Joaquin | Joe Patterson |
San Jose | Paul Higgins |
San Juan Capistrano | Chris Wu |
San Luis Obispo | Chris Stetsko |
San Mateo | Rob Smith |
Santa Barbara | Cathy Hayes |
Santa Clarita | Vanessa Wilk |
Santee | Tyler Ayers |
Solano | Matt Maffei |
Sonoma | Michael Erickson |
Temecula | Ryan Kenny |
Torrance | James Lorch |
Tulare | Gary Schulz |
Upland | Diane Fedele |
West Los Angeles | Scott Broschart |
Whittier | Michael Theisen |
Woodland | Sean Myers |
Woodland Hills | Jim Miervaldis |