Roger Moore Craver is an American fundraiser and campaigner for progressive causes. A pioneer of liberal political and movement direct mail[1] and co-founder of The Hotline, a bipartisan online briefing on American politics, Craver is currently Editor of TheAgitator.net.

Roger Craver
Born
Roger Moore Craver
NationalityAmerican
Alma materDickinson College
Occupation(s)Fundraiser and Author

Background edit

Craver received his bachelor's degree from Dickinson College.[2]

Career edit

Along with his conservative counterpart, Richard Viguerie, Craver was among the first to apply direct mail methodology to movement and political fundraising.[3] He has said that the frustration and alienation that Americans felt during the 1960s developed a social environment that encouraged the success of the fundraising method. Later scholars would call Craver an early pioneer for Democratic and progressive direct mail efforts.[4]

In 1969 Craver joined John W. Gardner in creating Common Cause. He familiarized himself with the techniques of veteran commercial direct mail marketer Lester Wunderman and figured out how to apply them to marketing nonprofit causes.[5] The success of Common Cause -- $2 million and a donor list of 100,000 in the first six months—proved to be a catalyst for the founding and growth of similar citizen action organizations.[6]

In 1972, Craver left Common Cause to found Craver, Mathews, Smith & Company, the consulting firm that helped launch the National Organization for Women (NOW), The National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) The National Council to Control Handguns (now the Brady Campaign) and grow the ACLU, Planned Parenthood, Sierra Club, Amnesty International, Greenpeace, The Southern Poverty Law Center, and help dozens more nonprofits like Habitat for Humanity and Heifer International gain traction through direct mail fundraising.[7]

The post-Watergate campaign finance reforms limiting the amount of money individuals could contribute to political campaigns boosted the importance of mass direct mail with its smaller individual gifts and found Craver and Tom Mathews, his business partner, actively engaged in fundraising for the Democratic Party and liberal candidates.[8]

By the late 1970s, his firm raised significant amounts for Democratic Senate candidates, including Frank Church (Idaho), George McGovern (South Dakota), Birch Bayh (Indiana), and John Culver (Iowa). They repeated the process from the mid-70s through 1980 for the presidential campaigns of Morris Udall, Edward Kennedy, and John Anderson.[9]

Through most of 1980s and early 1990s Craver and his firm worked on programs for the Democratic National Committee (DNC), the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC), and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC). But they resigned after working with the Democratic National Committee for six years and building its donor base from 60,000 to 750,000. Craver discovered that DNC chairman Charles Manatt and former vice president Walter Mondale were lobbyists for the Alyeska Pipeline Company, and that this constituted a conflict of interest with a CMS client, the Sierra Club.[10]

After working with the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee for ten years, CMS resigned because its client Common Cause had filed a conflict of interest complaint against Speaker of the House Jim Wright, who was ex-officio chair of the DCCC. In 1991, after twelve years, Craver, Mathews, Smith (CMS) resigned from the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee over the Democrats’ failure to respond quickly and forcefully to the sexual abuse allegations by Anita Hill against Justice Clarence Thomas during his Supreme Court nomination hearings. Craver told The New York Times, “Women constitute a substantial portion of the donors to the D.S.C.C. For years, they have been reaching deep into their pockets to help protect the Democratic majority in the Senate because they truly believed only a Democratic Senate could protect them from an increasingly conservative judiciary and an outwardly hostile executive branch. That faith was shattered by the way the Democratically controlled Senate handled the entire Thomas nomination."[11]

In 2006 Craver returned to politics to help launch a Unity08 a political reform movement aimed at offering voters the opportunity to directly engage in politics online, and through a secure vote nominate an alternative bipartisan ticket to the Democratic and Republican Parties’ presidential tickets for the 2008 Presidential election. [12] The Unity08 ticket was to consist of two candidates from the two parties. The bipartisan team was to propose a bipartisan cabinet in an effort to end paralysis in government. The organization suspended operations in early 2008 over disputes with the Federal Election Commission, lack of adequate funding and the resignation of two of its top leaders.[13]

In September 1987, Craver partnered with Doug Bailey, a Republican consultant, to found The Hotline. This online daily political briefing, a prototype for future news aggregators, published political information from all over the US, intending to provide an alternative to “inside the belt-way” news. The newsletter was delivered to paid subscribers at first via fax and later online every morning, and included polling as well as jokes from late-night television, alongside the political quotes. The Hotline quickly became “required reading” for Washington DC with subscribers including news bureaus and political offices. The publication was purchased in 1996 by the National Journal, now a subsidiary of Atlantic Media.

The impetus of The Hotline came from both a perceived need for bipartisan news, and the upcoming 1988 presidential election, and therefore for the first year the newsletter highlighted news from Iowa and New Hampshire especially. It was the first electronic delivery of political news in US history.[14] At this early stage, before the advent of the Internet, the Newsweek Magazine opined that such information delivery may have been unhealthy for the public and politics in general. Eventually The Hotline would move online and be delivered via the Internet, with subscribers logging into The Hotline website to receive their copies—with around twelve thousand subscribers by 1995—subscriptions were priced around $4,000 annually.

A number of prominent journalists are alums of The Hotline including Chuck Todd, NBC News Political Director and Moderator of Meet the Press; Norah O'Donnell, co-anchor of CBS This Morning; Stephen F. Hayes, Editor of The Weekly Standard and Ken Rudin, Political Editor of National Public Radio.[15]

Publications edit

Craver is Editor of the fundraising and communications blog and website The Agitator, which for 11 years has provided daily insight into fundraising trends.

In 2014, Emerson & Church published Craver's book Retention Fundraising: the new art and science of keeping your donors for life in which he explores why donors quit an organization, what can be done to retain donors, and identifies the key drivers that deepen a donor's commitment.[16]

In 2010, John Wiley & Sons published Internet Management for Nonprofits: Strategies, Tools and Trade Secrets to which Craver contributed the chapter “Insight Tools for Surviving and Thriving” and, served as a contributing author in the John Wiley & Sons 1st edition of the book Achieving Excellence in Fundraising.[17]

Recognition edit

  • 2017: Growing Philanthropy Award presented by the Hartsook Institutes for Fundraising
  • 2011: The American Association of Political Consultants Hall of Fame[18]
  • 2002: Direct Marketing Association Max Hart Nonprofit Achievement Award[19]

References edit

  1. ^ Warick, Mal (2004). Revolution in the Mailbox: Your Guide to Successful Direct Mail Fundraising. Jossey-Bass. p. 4. ISBN 1118105117.
  2. ^ Kimmel, Sherri (2008). "Finding Common Cause". Dickinson Magazine.
  3. ^ Warick, Mal (2004). Revolution in the Mailbox: Your Guide to Successful Direct Mail Fundraising. Jossey-Bass. p. 5. ISBN 1118105117.
  4. ^ Williams, Christine (2012). Political Marketing in Retrospective and Prospective. Rutledge. p. 73. ISBN 978-1138946477.
  5. ^ Hatch, Denison (November 1993). "Fundraiser Extraordinaire". Target Marketing. 11: 26.
  6. ^ Weaver, Warren (October 8, 1981). "LIBERALS OPEN PURSES TO FUND-RAISER". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
  7. ^ Johnson, Dennis (2016). Democracy for Hire: A History of American Political Consulting. Oxford University Press. p. 193. ISBN 978-0190272692.
  8. ^ Roberts, Sam (October 26, 2017). "Tom Mathews, Promoter of Liberal Causes and Candidates, Dies at 96". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
  9. ^ Mason, Jim (2011). No Holding Back: The 1980 John B. Anderson Presidential Campaign. UPA. p. 97. ISBN 978-0761852261.
  10. ^ Johnson, Dennis (2016). Democracy for Hire: A History of American Political Consulting. Oxford University Press. p. 194. ISBN 978-0190272692.
  11. ^ Berke, Richard (October 17, 1991). "THE THOMAS CONFIRMATION; Women Accusing Democrats of Betrayal". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
  12. ^ Green, Joshua (2007). "Surprise Party". The Atlantic. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
  13. ^ Danis, Kirsten (2008-01-11). "Two from presidential reform group quit to draft Mayor Bloomberg for 2008 bid". NYDailyNews.com. Retrieved 2008-01-11.
  14. ^ Randolph, Eleanor (October 11, 1987). "A HOT-OFF-THE-WIRE SERVICE FOR POLITICAL JUNKIES". The Washington Post. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
  15. ^ Randolph, Eleanor (November 28, 1995). "POLITICS : For Many in the Media, Hotline Is a Must-Read Daily Source : Publisher sees it as voice of diversity. Critics say it can reinforce the herd mentality". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
  16. ^ Craver, Roger (2014). Retention Fundraising: The New Art and Science of Keeping Your Donors for Life. Emerson & Church Publishers. ISBN 978-1889102535.
  17. ^ "Internet Management for Nonprofits: Strategies, Tools and Trade Secrets". wiley.com.
  18. ^ "AAPC Hands Out Pollies, Welcomes New Hall of Famers". Campaigns & Elections. Retrieved 27 May 2018.
  19. ^ "Max Hart Nonprofit Achievement Award". DMA Nonprofit Association. Retrieved 27 May 2018.

External links edit