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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsNo Starbucks, No Salads: A field guide to campaign food
One of the best early indicators of success on Election Day is someone walking into campaign headquarters with a box of Dunkin Donut Munchkins. Not the full-size donuts, mind you. Thats the wrong vibe. It has to be the munchkins. You can basically draw a straight line from the box of munchkins to the swearing-in ceremony.
Political campaigns are replete with superstitions. Personally, Im partial to the soft plastic yard signs. Not the corrugated ones. Those are bulky and awkwardyou cant fit more than 15 in an average-size trunk. And they act like sails in the wind. Not to mention the stakes. The time spent trying to fish the metal prongs into the tiny little plastic openings shaves probably a point and a half off your results. Cardboard signs are no better. One heavy rain and a month of field operations are reduced to wet recycling. But the soft plastic signsthe soft plastic signs are perfect. They come in a roll of a hundred or more, easily on one spool. They assemble in flash. No fishing around for little holes. And theyre resilient. Not even a determined downpour can lessen their resolve.
Food is no different. There are foods that fuel victory, and foods that spell defeat. A box of Joe from Dunkin Donuts and youre halfway to your win number. If you opt for a latte from Starbucks, you might as well start drafting your concession speech now. Dunkin Donuts is coffee for working. Youre here for the long hours, and Dunkin is here for you. Its unfussy. Its a partner in the fight for democracy. Starbucks is like a campaign run by high-dollar donors, obnoxious kids, and McKinsey consultants. Its a caramel foam slide deck when you need boots on the ground.
I once met with a candidate running for Congress who wanted to have our initial meeting in a Chinese restaurant. I like Chinese food as much as the next personand as far as takeout in the campaign HQ, it worksbut a kickoff meeting at a sit-down Chinese restaurantthe whole campaign was doomed before they brought the fortune cookies.
https://newjerseyglobe.com/campaigns/no-starbucks-no-salads-a-field-guide-to-campaign-food/
GenThePerservering
(3,278 posts)or class for that matter, drinks Starbucks burnt beans watery coffee, anyway.
ProfessorGAC
(76,553 posts)It just have an overall taste profile I don't find pleasant.
I once stopped at McD for a coffee on the way to management meetings.
The COO saw my McD cup and said "I'm surprised you didn't stop to get a better coffee."
I replied "If you mean Starbucks, I did stop some place with better coffee. "
He thought it was funny.
bamagal62
(4,481 posts)Tears my stomach up.