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How to Write a Political Press Release That Actually Moves Voters
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How to Write a Political Press Release That Actually Moves Voters

8 min read
By Andrew Blase
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Most political press releases do not move votes, money, or volunteers—they just fill inboxes. A high‑leverage release teaches reporters a sharper way to look at the race, spotlights a clear contrast, and then drives a specific action such as RSVPs, donations, or media ride‑alongs — much like a well-crafted political campaign speech that moves voters does from the stage.[1][2][3]


Stop “Announcing and Hoping”

The default pattern in politics is simple: announce something, send a release, and hope a reporter cares. That approach produces bland copy, forgettable headlines, and very little measurable impact on your field or fundraising efforts.[2][3][4]

Instead, treat every press release as a small strategic campaign:

  • Clarify the one behavior you want to drive (coverage, turnout, donations, signups).
  • Decide what belief or assumption you need to challenge to make that behavior more likely.
  • Use the release to walk people from their current assumption to your new point of view—and then tell them exactly what to do next.[5][6]

Campaign communications team reviewing polling data and press coverage together in a small campaign office.

Begin With an Insight, Not a Draft

Strong political press releases do not start with the candidate’s talking points; they start with something the audience does not yet understand about the race. That “missing piece” becomes the tension in your headline and the spine of your story.[3][6][5]

Mini‑workflow:

  1. Pull 2–3 concrete data points:
    • Polls or public data showing where voters are mistaken or uninformed.
    • Field metrics (e.g., which precincts are ignored and what you are doing there).
    • Fundraising signals that reveal where real enthusiasm is coming from.[1][3]
  2. Ask: “What are people wrongly assuming about this race, this community, or this issue?”
  3. Write one sentence that corrects that assumption—this becomes the core of your headline and lede.

Example assumption shift

  • Old belief: “TV ads decide this race.”
  • New belief: “Door‑to‑door conversations in historically low‑turnout neighborhoods decide this race.”

Your press release exists to move people from the old belief to the new one, backed by evidence.[6][5]

Campaign manager and candidate reviewing polling and field data charts on a wall to shape press messaging.

A Modern Structure for Political Press Releases

Here is a realistic 300–500 word structure that matches standard political press‑release expectations but builds in that insight‑and‑tension spine.[7][1]

Sample political press release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Date: October 10, 2026 Contact: Jamie Rivera, Communications Director, 555‑123‑4567, [email protected]

While Opponents Buy More TV Ads, Jordan Lee’s Campaign Knocks Every Door in Eastside District This Weekend

EASTSIDE, CA – In a race dominated by outside spending, Jordan Lee’s campaign is betting on conversations, not commercials. More than 312 volunteers are set to knock 9,500 doors this weekend in Eastside and Riverview precincts—neighborhoods that had the lowest voter turnout in the 2022 midterm election.

“If your rent went up 40 percent while your wages stayed flat, a 30‑second ad is not enough,” said Jordan Lee, a public school teacher and lifelong Eastside resident. “We’re having real conversations on porches and in apartment hallways about how to make this city affordable again.”

The campaign’s volunteer network has already completed 27,000 door‑knocks since August, focusing on apartment buildings and blocks that other campaigns often skip. Field organizers say more than half of the voters they meet are undecided or have never voted in a local election.

“The story of this race isn’t who’s running the most ads—it’s who’s actually showing up at people’s doors,” said field director Ana Morales. “Our volunteers are making sure no neighborhood gets written off.”

Reporters interested in riding along with a canvass team or interviewing volunteers can RSVP at leeformetro.com/press‑rides. Voters who want to join the weekend canvass can sign up for a two‑hour shift at leeformetro.com/volunteer‑eastside.

About Jordan Lee for Metro Council Jordan Lee is a public school teacher, renter, and lifelong Eastside resident running for Metro Council to make housing, transit, and everyday life more affordable for working families.

Why this structure works:

  • The headline and first sentence present a clear contrast, not a bland announcement.
  • Numbers and neighborhoods make the story concrete and provable.
  • Quotes interpret what the numbers mean for real people, instead of repeating slogans.
  • Dual calls‑to‑action tell press and voters exactly what to do next.[4][1]

Formatting and Timing: Make It Easy to Use

Reporters are busy, so the best writing will still fail if your press release is hard to skim, copy, or quote.[8][1]

Format basics

  • Length: 300–500 words, with short paragraphs.
  • Dateline: CITY, STATE – first sentence answering who, what, when, where, why.
  • Contact: Name, phone, and email at the top.
  • Style: Third person, AP‑style capitalization and punctuation; minimal slogan language in the body.[7][1]

When and how to send

  • Timing:
    • Weekday mornings (roughly 9–11 a.m. local) tend to get more attention than evenings and weekends.[9][3]
    • Avoid Friday late afternoon unless you intentionally want low visibility.
  • Channel and subject:
    • Paste the release into the email body; avoid attachment‑only blasts.
    • Use a subject line that sounds like a headline from the reporter’s outlet, not an internal slogan.
    • Maintain clean, updated press lists by geography and beat.[10][3]

Campaign staffer using a printed checklist and media list while scheduling a political press release on a laptop.


Use Specific, Grounded Language

Vague, committee‑approved language signals that nothing new is happening. Specific, grounded language signals that you understand what is at stake for real people.[2][4]

Swap:

  • “We are fighting for hardworking families”

for:

  • “We are fighting to lower prescription drug prices for 42,000 seniors in this district who cannot afford this year’s increase.”[11][10]

Guidelines:

  • Prefer concrete numbers and place names over abstractions.
  • Use direct quotes to explain trade‑offs and stakes, not to repeat the body text.
  • Keep buzzwords to a minimum unless you immediately show what they look like on the ground.

External case study

  • Guides to political press releases for local and independent campaigns stress using everyday language, neighborhood names, and real voter stories to earn coverage in community outlets.[4][2]

Connect Press Releases to Your Field and Digital Plans

A release that gets picked up but does not change behavior is a missed opportunity. Treat each release as the narrative hub for a small, integrated campaign.[3][4]

To do that:

  • Decide the primary goal in advance: canvass RSVPs, online donations, petition signatures, event turnout, list growth, etc.
  • Use the same core line in:
    • The release headline.
    • Email subject and preview text.
    • SMS openers and social copy.[12][3]
  • Drive to one or two specific links with tracking so you can see what actually moved people (press coverage, email, social, or SMS).[12][13]

If you are using a volunteer‑management or campaign platform:

  • Create a unique signup page for each press‑driven event or action.
  • Track which stories and outlets correlate with surges in signups, shifts completed, or donations — and ensure the platform you use has the right campaign manager tools to close the loop between earned media and field activity.[12][14]

External examples

  • Political campaign tools like NGP VAN and VolunteerHub highlight how combining press, digital outreach, and signup infrastructure can significantly increase event turnout and volunteer engagement.[14][12]

Campaign staffer completing a printed press release checklist and sending the release from a laptop.


Quick Checklist and Template

Before sending your next political press release, run through this checklist.[8][1]

  • One clearly defined audience and one primary behavior you want.
  • A single sentence that flips a common assumption about the race.
  • At least 2–3 specific numbers or place names that bring the story to life.
  • Quotes that add interpretation, not repetition.
  • A concise, skimmable format reporters can use immediately.
  • One or two clear, trackable calls‑to‑action.

Template skeleton:

  • Headline: Contrast or tension + outcome
  • Subheadline: Who is affected + what changes + by when
  • Dateline and lede: CITY, STATE – Who/what/when/where/why in 1–2 sentences
  • Paragraphs 2–3: Context, numbers, neighborhoods, and voices
  • Quotes: Candidate + volunteer or community leader explaining stakes
  • Call to action: Press RSVP, volunteer signup, donation, or petition — pair this with volunteer recruitment software and a text message campaign to maximize conversion from any media hit.
  • Boilerplate: One sentence that positions the campaign and what it stands for[1][7]

References

  1. https://www.prnewswire.com/resources/articles/political-government-press-release-templates-examples/ ↩ ↩2 ↩3 ↩4 ↩5 ↩6 ↩7 ↩8
  2. https://goodparty.org/blog/article/political-press-release ↩ ↩2 ↩3 ↩4
  3. https://www.onlinecandidate.com/articles/write-an-optimized-political-press-release ↩ ↩2 ↩3 ↩4 ↩5 ↩6 ↩7 ↩8
  4. https://intelligentrelations.com/insights/political-press-release/ ↩ ↩2 ↩3 ↩4 ↩5
  5. https://www.wingrep.ai/post/teach-tailor-take-control-the-challenger-trifecta-explained ↩ ↩2 ↩3
  6. https://stevebizblog.com/improve-sales-employing-three-ts/ ↩ ↩2 ↩3
  7. https://www.prnewswire.co.uk/resources/articles/political-and-government-press-release-templates-and-examples/ ↩ ↩2 ↩3
  8. https://www.acep.org/get-involved/becoming-a-spokesperson/speak-out/how-to-write-a-press-release ↩ ↩2
  9. https://foe.scot/get-involved/people-power-network/press-release-tips/ ↩
  10. https://www.thefire.org/research-learn/press-release-and-media-advisory-tips-foundation-individual-rights-and-expression ↩ ↩2
  11. https://www.bottlebill.org/index.php/guide-to-writing-a-press-release ↩
  12. Beta-marketing-plan.md ↩ ↩2 ↩3 ↩4
  13. Article-SEO.md ↩
  14. Art-Direction.md ↩ ↩2

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