There’s a
video
It’s this aspect of campaigning — the sheer tactile immediacy of it — that Kennedy says he misses most right now.
“Every campaign that I’ve ever tried to run has been very heavily retail based, right?” Kennedy said. “It’s getting out into the communities, meeting people where they are, in their homes, in their workplaces, on the streets.
“That’s a lot of handshakes and high fives and fist bumps. And I can’t do any of that anymore.”
In this particular contest, Kennedy’s inability to get up close and physical could be a difference maker. The Democratic Senate primary isn’t really about ideology; while their positions differ on some issues differ, both Kennedy and the incumbent, Sen. Ed Markey, are progressives. And it’s not about demography, since both candidates are white men. Instead, it’s a match-up between Kennedy’s youthful vigor and Markey’s long record of service, being waged on a playing field redrawn by the pandemic.
Their approaches haven’t been identical. On March 13, Kennedy announced that he was temporarily suspending his campaign. He canceled all fundraising events, pulled his online advertising, and backed out of a scheduled debate — but he didn’t go dark. Instead, he went online, and all in on COVID-19.
Case in point: a Facebook Live conversation with
Jason Furman
In the days after his campaign’s so-called suspension. Kennedy also interviewed his friend
Jon Santiago
It paid off. A press release from the nominally suspended campaign
bragged
All of which raises a delicate question: During the coronavirus crisis, what’s the line between altruistic service and plain old politicking?
“Is there the benefit that people say, ‘Hey, the Kennedy people are checking in with me?’ Sure,” Nick Clemons, Kennedy’s campaign manager, acknowledged.
But while Clemons doesn’t deny that elderly voters who get a call from Kennedy for Massachusetts might respond favorably, he insists that’s not the point.
“At the end of the day, they’re probably going to leave the conversation with us with a positive impression, but that wasn’t the motivating factor,” Clemons said. “The motivating thing was … we’ve got these resources. How do we put them to good use?”
Markey has also been busy on the virtual campaign trail. Unlike Kennedy, he never froze any part of his campaign operation. And he, too, has been talking a lot about COVID-19.
In a Facebook Live of his own, for example, Markey got a virtual tour from
Gladys Vega
Vega is a legendary organizer, so her insights about the pandemic in Chelsea carried weight — as did her kind words for the incumbent. (“You have always been a friend to Chelsea,” Vega told Markey. “So I’m glad that we’re doing the interview, and I’m glad that we have a senator such as you.”) In fact, when Markey
fired back
You could hear a similar dynamic in Markey’s conversation with
Sara Nelson
In addition, while Kennedy has his telegenic kids, Markey has his own unique campaign asset: an unexpected knack for offbeat social media. A few weeks ago, a
tweet
Now, oddly, Markey’s basketball skills and taste in sneakers have become a source of fascination for his fans, particularly
younger ones
“I had no idea it was going to take on this identity,” Markey said. “Here’s what I’ve learned: I’ve learned that Air Revolutions are inter-generational, they’re universal, they are eternal.”
Meanwhile, voters have learned that Markey once won the annual congressional free throw contest by making 47 of 50 shots. Taken together, those photos and that biographical wrinkle help humanize the senator, while also suggesting he’s pretty spry for 73.
“I had some of my greatest memories spending my evenings at the park in Malden, practicing,” Markey said. “Whenever anyone asked my mother where I was, she’d say, ‘He’s at the basketball court … of course.’ So I just want to say to my mother, God bless her — all that practice is paying off!”
The challenge now, for both Markey and Kennedy, is to keep creating moments that make people pay attention. After all, with COVID-19 still dominating the headline and the novelty of online video starting to ebb, some voters may be ready to tune out —and the primary is still four whole months away.