Harvest
Monroe crawls and ingests the messy public record - Secretary-of-State feeds, county auditors, election law, the voter file, FEC, radio - and uses AI to read it into clean, queryable data.
Its name is Monroe.
Election Night and BrainCast are the part you can see. Underneath them is Monroe: fifty-two services that harvest the data, score the models, and broadcast the result, on their own hardware, around the clock. It has been running for cycles.
One loop, run continuously. Monroe turns the raw public record into a live answer on a screen, then keeps it true as the world changes.
Monroe crawls and ingests the messy public record - Secretary-of-State feeds, county auditors, election law, the voter file, FEC, radio - and uses AI to read it into clean, queryable data.
It fuses everything into one federated catalog and scores it against custom models: turnout, performance, victory probability. The data joins across sources nothing else keeps in one place.
It renders the answer into broadcast-quality boards and casts them to screens, kiosks, and live streams, then keeps them current on a schedule, with no one in the loop.
Every module rides the same spine. Most of these speak MCP, so an agent can drive them directly. None of it runs on a cloud meter.
Orchestration, memory, document understanding, and generation - the layer that reads, writes, and reasons.
Voter analysis, districts, geocoding, ETL, storage - the shared data platform everything else stands on.
SMS, email, WhatsApp, webhooks, short links - every channel a campaign talks through, as an API.
Auth, tenancy, monitoring, scheduling, the mesh - the self-hosted plumbing that keeps 50+ services honest.
The CRM, canvassing, radio buying, donations, workflow - the tools campaign staff actually open every day.
This is not a roadmap. Monroe called the Georgia governor's runoff on election night, runs Michigan's hyper-local boards, is standing Iowa up from configuration, and keeps a book of business dashboards current. The field just hasn't looked under the surface yet.
Bring a race, a committee, or a book of business. A live tool on your own numbers in days, not a six-month build.