National Post

Clinton team launch ‘couch-surfing’ service

- By Rob Crilly The Sunday Telegraph

New York • Hillary Clinton’s decision to locate her campaign headquarte­rs in fashionabl­e Brooklyn has given staffers and volunteers a major headache — how to find accommodat­ion in one of the country’s most inflated housing markets.

The campaign is running a spareroom or couch-surfing service, pairing donors with its young army of workers who need a bed for the night.

The scheme is part necessity, part branding exercise for a wealthy politician frequently derided as out of touch with ordinary Americans.

One recent email put it bluntly: “Do you have a spare room — or just a spare couch! — where a new staffer could stay? You and I both know that finding a place to live in New York can take longer than an afternoon of apartment hunting.

“These folks will be working long days, so they really just need a place to sleep, and they’ll be so grateful to be staying with someone who shares their beliefs and their goals.”

Clinton’s run for the White House is based over two floors of an office block in Brooklyn Heights.

Cynics suggested it was part of an attempt to gain a hipper image by picking New York’s most fashionabl­e borough.

In fact, Brooklyn Heights lacks the hipster appeal of such places as Williamsbu­rg, but even so, its historic brownstone­s and views across the East River to Manhattan mean rents are the highest in the borough. Finding a shoe-box-sized apartment for less than US$2,000 a month is a challenge.

Lena Dunham, writer and star of Girls, recently spent almost $5 million on a home nearby.

For those on a more modest budget, it means scouting locations deeper into Brooklyn, in neighbourh­oods that have yet to get an artisan

Do you have a spare room — or just a spare couch! — where a staffer could stay?

coffee shop — or apartment hopping using the Clinton campaign’s host-a-staffer service.

Jasmin Harris, 22, stayed with a middle-aged couple in their Brooklyn Heights apartment for six weeks, until they needed their spare room.

“I don’t know exactly where I’m going, but I’ll be somewhere else tonight,” she told The New York Times. “I have my bags packed and am waiting for an email.”

It is not the only money-saving element of the campaign. Workers have been told to take the bus wherever possible. That is in part to keep costs down during the primary campaign when donations are limited to $2,700 per person, but also to show lessons have been learned from the disastrous 2008 run when Clinton was seen as the high-spending Washington insider upended by Barack Obama’s shoestring insurgents.

However, it leaves Clinton with a dilemma — whether or not to take her usual summer break in the Hamptons, where a holiday home can cost $200,000 a month.

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