Better lists for local race execution
A city council campaign may need precinct-oriented canvassing, turnout universes for likely supporters, and a way to compare segment size before spending limited budget. CA Voter is built for that style of campaign decision.
The workflow keeps list preparation direct: define the geography, narrow the voters, inspect the signal, and export only when the campaign is ready to act.
- Precinct and local geography-oriented filtering
- Turnout tiers and vote-by-mail signal review
- Portable CSV exports for field and mail programs
- Campaign-readable segment counts before execution
Designed for nonpartisan and mixed-party environments
Many city council races do not behave like straightforward partisan contests. Campaign software for nonpartisan races needs to make geography, turnout history, local context, and list quality visible instead of assuming party label is enough.
CA Voter helps teams work with those signals while keeping the underlying methodology visible enough to review before a list is exported.
- Build universes without relying only on partisan registration labels
- Compare turnout and geography before field or mail work begins
- Keep local race list decisions explainable to candidates and consultants
What to build first for a city council race
A practical first pass usually starts with the district boundary, then separates voters into turnout, canvassing, mail, and follow-up universes. The goal is to give the campaign a short list of voter groups it can actually act on.
CA Voter keeps those groups reviewable so a candidate, manager, consultant, or field lead can compare counts before volunteers or vendors receive the final file.
- Likely voter universe for early persuasion or name ID
- High-propensity turnout list for late field work
- Canvassing list sized to volunteer capacity
- Exportable mail or phone universe for downstream tools
Need city council voter data for a California race?
Request beta access for pricing, eligibility review, and onboarding tied to the district, role, and field or mail workflow.
Questions
Can CA Voter help with nonpartisan city council races?
Yes. The workflow can still be useful in nonpartisan races because campaigns often need geography, turnout, and list-quality filters even when party labels matter less.
What should campaign software for nonpartisan races do?
Campaign software for nonpartisan races should help teams build voter universes from geography, turnout, contact history, and local context instead of depending only on party labels.
Is this workable for a small local campaign?
Yes. Private beta pricing starts at $99 per race because local California campaigns should be able to use the product without statewide-scale overhead.
What voter list should a city council campaign build first?
Start with the district geography, then build a likely-voter or priority-turnout universe the campaign can review before creating canvassing, mail, or phone lists.
Can city council campaigns export lists for field or mail?
Yes. CA Voter is built around reviewable segments and portable exports so a local campaign can move voter lists into field, mail, phone, or other outreach workflows.