Today political campaigns are no longer about being able to shake every hand in the room but rather about reaching every single person who might wander into a polling place and mark a ballot. With seats at campaign events always limited and with the days and weeks of the average voter being busy enough without the addition of a rally every month, political campaigners have had to reach out to voters where they actually are.
And where are they? For many the answer is they are on their phones, on a social network, or just generally online.
It’s little surprise, then, that the modern political campaign is more and more committed to reaching voters via digital means. Whether advertising on search engines and social media, reaching out to email lists with millions of subscribers, analyzing data for trends and voting intentions, or asking – even begging – for political donations, the internet is often where modern political campaigning lives and dies.
It ended public segregation
Its not A or B but I think it might be C I am not 100 percent sure.
Answer:
The Great Depression was the worst economic downturn in US history. It began in ... Hoover's response to the crisis
Answer:
True
Explanation:
The 15th Amendment gave black American ex-slaves the right to vote, equal protection of the law and right to ownership of property. This was passed by Congress in 1869 and ratified in 1870.
Therefore, abolition of ownership and equal protection of the law are two of the effects from ratification of the fifteenth amendment.