Solemnly Swearing: How to Run a Political Campaign
Impossibile aggiungere al carrello
Rimozione dalla Lista desideri non riuscita.
Non è stato possibile aggiungere il titolo alla Libreria
Non è stato possibile seguire il Podcast
Esecuzione del comando Non seguire più non riuscita
-
Letto da:
-
Di:
A proposito di questo titolo
What does it actually take to run for office?
In this episode of Learned Too Late, former Miss America and congressional candidate Mallory Hagan breaks down the real, behind-the-scenes mechanics of running a political campaign — from exploratory committees and fundraising to voter outreach and campaign infrastructure.
Mallory shares her journey from moving to New York at 19 with $1,000, to winning Miss America 2013, to running for Congress in Alabama — twice.
We discuss:
- How to run for office (step-by-step)
- Filing to get on the ballot
- Building a campaign team
- How political fundraising actually works
- What campaign managers do
- Field operations, voter data, and turnout strategy
- The cost of running as a Democrat in a red state
- Losing an election without losing purpose
- Encouraging young people and women to enter politics
- Why local elections matter more than you think
- Voter registration and civic engagement
- The emotional and personal toll of a campaign
- Learning to say no after years of people-pleasing
Mallory also opens up about:
- The anger and resilience that come with losing
- The realities of party infrastructure in Alabama
- Encouraging women to run for office
- What she learned too late about boundaries and self-worth
If you’ve ever wondered:
- “How do I run for Congress?”
- “How much does it cost to run a political campaign?”
- “What does a campaign actually look like day-to-day?”
- “Can I run for office without a political background?”
This episode answers it.
Because democracy isn’t a spectator sport.
Register to vote. Support local candidates. And if you don’t like who represents you — consider becoming the candidate.
Follow for more: @learnedtoolatepod @allynrose @itsmalloryhagan
New episodes weekly. Follow, rate, and review to help more people learn it before it’s too late.