There's a playful drive
afoot to draft law professor, free-culture guru, and PowerPoint maestro
Larry Lessig to run in the April 8 special election for the open seat in California's
12th congressional district. Thing is, "Congressman Lessig"
might not be as far-fetched as it first seems.
Larry Lessig is tying a possible congressional run to the question of
whether or not launching a campaign and/or actually serving as a
member of Congress is the best way to advance a national "grassroots"
Change Congress movement. It's a provocative question, and it's exciting to watch the Stanford prof and free culture guru go
through the process of answering it.
As the Democratic online fundraising hub ActBlue passes the $50 mark, some on the right resist going grassroots to raise cash; what does it mean to run as a computer "illiterate" candidate in a networked world?; just because we're talking to Congress doesn't mean they're listening; the debate continues over the necessary of announcing "I'm committing an act of journalism!"; the Obama camp sets up an "Internet war room;" and more.
Here's a tale of two radically different uses of technology on Capitol Hill: the first to keep all but the most-connected people out, and the second to let the rest of us in. In the first case, we have Members of Congress who are crack-berry addicts staying in permanent contact with their cronies and donors, even on the floor where lobbyists are supposedly banned. And in the second case, we have a Republican Congressman who is Twittering from what he calls the "deepest and darkest hole" in Congress.
John Culberson, Republican from Houston, has taken an early but wide lead as "most connected Congressman" via twitter and Qik.
Further proof that what happens in twitter doesn't necessarily stay in twitter is the continuing controversy (?!) over the use of new technology by Congresspeople.
Now that FISA has been put to rest, what happens to the group that quickly formed to protest Obama's stance on the bill?; the Twitter Dome Scandal (we coined that!) heats up, and we break it all down for you; a new map tracks where in the world our presidential candidates are; and much, much more.
Twitter in a teacup is officially downgraded from a kerfuffle to a mere brouhaha. Still, there are lessons to learn about how to communicate with Congress and who owns the infrastructure we use.
You can never leave the safety of the beltway without missing something. More twitter-dome news breaks while I'm at the beach. The Gray Lady runs with the story but misses the point. Representative Culberson makes a constructive intervention and apologizes for going partisan. Could this be progress?
Bill Richardson and -- sooprise, sooprise -- Ron Paul come out on top of Slate's vice-presidential picker; the Obama campaign is, in the words of one Dean veteran, not innovative but "extraordinarily professional;" we get a look into how professionally-made video fits into the Obama campaign; and much, much more.