Jamestown Associates

Jamestown Associates is a Republican political consulting firm based in Princeton, NJ. It provides full-service political consulting and works with clients throughout the United States to develop mailings, commercials, and campaign strategies for political clients throughout the country.

Contents

Work

Jamestown Associates is based out of Princeton, NJ with offices in Washington, DC, Baton Rouge, LA, and Dallas, TX,

Ads produced by Jamestown have been cited in various media sources.[1][2] The firm has won dozens of Pollie Awards[3] A number of its advertisements have been featured on Meet the Press, ABC, NBC, and CBS News, Crossfire, Hannity and Colmes and Hardball with Chris Matthews.

For the 2009 General Election, Jamestown Associates did award winning work for the successful campaign of Gubernatorial candidate Chris Christie. Jamestown Associates won two Pollie Awards, one for a piece of Direct Mail and another for a Web Video. [6]

As of the end of the 2010 General Election Jamestown Associates was the 7th largest grossing Republican Consulting firm in the country. [7]

In February 2011, Jamestown client Jonathan Perry won a special election for State Senate in Louisiana, which gave the Republicans control of both houses of the Louisiana legislature for the first time since Reconstruction. In October 2010, the firm said that a contractor it hired had used the phrase "hicky blue collar" in describing the actors wanted for a National Republican Senatorial Committee ad to be shown in West Virginia.[4]

Notable clients

Notable clients in the 2010 General Election.

Elected to Congress on November 2nd 2010

Re-Elected to Congress on November 2nd 2010

Elected Statewide on November 2nd 2010

Locations

Jamestown is based in Princeton, New Jersey, and also has offices in Washington D.C., Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and Dallas, Texas.[7]

References

  1. ^ [1] Ad one of ten best.
  2. ^ [2] Effort to turn the tables.
  3. ^ [3], 2004 Pollie Award Recipients.
  4. ^ Greg Sargent (October 14, 2010). "NRSC admits responsiblity [sic] for 'hicky' language". Washington Post. http://voices.washingtonpost.com/plum-line/2010/10/nrsc_admits_vendor_was_respons.html. 
  5. ^ [4], The Battle for Congress.
  6. ^ [5], Who's Really Running the Race.
  7. ^ Larry Weitzner page. Company Web site. Retrieved 2010-10-07.