Library

The Campaign Lab Library is a growing collection of what we’ve built and learned – from AI tools and field-tested guides to research briefings and campaign resources.

Everything here is made to be useful. Whether you’re running a local campaign, designing an experiment, or just looking for ideas, this is where we publish what might help others across the ecosystem.

Take what you need. Share what you can.

To access all content in the library please log in or sign up.

Entries to show:
Application area:
Helpful for:

Project Link Problem Addressed It can be difficult to keep track of all developments at a ward level. Its critical to have up to date info if you are researching your opposition to understand where they have failed, or a local campaigner trying to identify key achievements to build a hyper-local campaign. Approach & Implementation […]

Project Link Problem Addressed Unions do incredible work, but it can be hard to keep track of the wide range of concrete wins they deliver for their members. Approach & Implementation Campaign Lab volunteer Chris Owen built this tool to address these challenges. It uses AI to surface and monitor union wins, displaying them in […]

A tool to track and report Reform Council Failures across the country
A tool to provide analytics and analysis for Epetitions

Project Link Problem Addressed The idea for the gateway came out of Campaign Lab’s hack nights, where volunteers started exploring how we could make local democracy more transparent. Council minutes often have lots of information that is relevent to campaigners, journalists, and citizens but info is often buried deep in documents and PDFs. We wanted […]

A tool which tracks the progress of Labour Policy.
A bot that answers any and all questions you may have on the rules set and enforced by the UK’s Electoral Commission.
AI Canvassing Trainer: Practice doorstep conversations with diverse virtual voters; receive instant feedback and improvement tips.
Tailored political communication, made easy.
A tool that used localised statistics to demonstrate public service erosion over the previous government as a means of persuading voters at the last election.