In Case You Missed the Results

In case you missed it last week, The Hotline On Call published its Democratic and Republican insiders poll about the presidential candidate websites. 22 Democratic and 24 Republican internet strategists were polled for these articles. It is interesting to note the differences in rankings and comments on opposite sides of the aisles. For example, Obama's site was the clear favorite among the Republicans (10 votes), with Hillary coming in second (7 votes). On the Democratic side, Obama tied for first place with John Edwards (5 votes each) and Hillary only garnered 2 votes.

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Daily Digest: Obama as Clinton Redux, in More Ways Than One

History's Lessons for a Wired White House...Tracking the Evolution of Change.gov...Incoming Administration Faces Information Overload...Palin's Unstoppable Online Power...Just How Historic Was Obama's Presidential Run?...American Diplomacy in the Age of Facebook...and more.

Daily Digest: America Has a Few (Thousand) Things to Ask Obama

Change.gov's Open for Questions feature opened for business just yesterday morning, as I reported. Already, its first scandal! A few dozen queries about the suddenly infamous deal-making governor of Illinois, Rod Blagojevich, are being "censored," writes Politico's Ben Smith...The Obama campaign has been hitting its email list plenty hard over the last few days, hawking, on behalf of the Democratic National Committee, everything from $35 four-year calendars to a rather cute knit cap, yours for $25 or more...Former Clinton Administration Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers, who knows a thing or two about uncomfortable White House sexual situations, says on VanityFair.com that a recent Facebook photo of Obama speechwriter Jon Favreau fondling a cardboard version of a certain member of his boss's cabinet-to-be, "is no laughing matter"...and much more.

Following @dipnote: Hillary Clinton Steps Out

She's been uncharacteristically quiet since her confirmation as Secretary of State, but the Obama Administration's other rock star seems poised to change all that with her first big overseas trip to Asia - with the help of a Twitter-fueled blog audience that has increased three-fold since Barack Obama's inauguration. And while she inherits massive foreign policy challenges from her predecessor, Hillary Clinton also inherits a new media team at State that's at least a year into remaking America's digital image on the web.

Started under former Secretary Rice - and emphatically seamless, professional and non-partisan in its transition to Secretary Clinton - the expansion of State's online operation seems primed for President Obama's primary international goal: rebuilding the U.S. brand overseas.

Hillary Clinton's Inbox: Citizen Suggestions for Wired Diplomacy

Last week, Secretary Clinton's team at the State Department put up a short post on Dipnote, the departmental blog, asking for suggestions on technology and social media. It asked: "How Might the U.S. Utilize Innovative Technologies To Discuss U.S. Foreign Policy?"

The responses are illuminating and thoughtful, and worth reading by anyone considering the evolution of open government in the digital age.

A Digital State: Off the Campaign Trail, Clinton Takes to New Media

2638_68411237165_19003252165_2169522_6011369_nIn an exit interview with the new Public Diplomacy Magazine, former State Department point person on online/offline diplomacy James Glassman reports, "In my humble opinion Web 2.0 has completely changed this game." But with Bush-appointee Glassman taking leave of Foggy Bottom, there has been some questioning inside and outside State of how well his Facebook/YouTube/Twitter-powered "Public Diplomacy 2.0" had a place in Hillary Clinton's universe. The Associated Press's Matthew Lee, at least, sees signs that PD 2.0, as Glassman liked to call it, is a natural fit for the Clinton era. "In less than three months, Clinton's State Department has embarked on a digital diplomacy drive," he writes, "aimed at spreading the word about American foreign policy and restoring Washington's image."

In the handful of weeks of Clinton's tenure thus far, reports Lee, State started or juiced a number of new-media projects. Clinton's State Department launched an multimedia-enhanced Google map of her global jaunts. They've been experimenting with a "Text the Secretary" mobile feature that allows anyone to pose a question when she's on the road (though questions like "How was your trip?" aren't exactly provocative.) And they've kept the well-produced DipNote blog rolling along. Clinton also plans to expand upon X-Life, a mobile phone game that aims to bring the English language and American culture to the Middle East. ("Salah Moaveni has received the opportunity of a lifetime, an international exchange program to International University in Philadelphia Pennsylvania, USA... He will maneuver around the University, learning about the local culture, in order to take on trivia challenges, complete quests, and modify a project car to road-race against a bullying school tyrant called The Zephyr.")

And Clinton aide Cheryl Mills says things like "New media is critical in this new era of diplomacy, where smart power and expanded dialogues are essential to achieving our foreign policy goals." All of which is no doubt pleasing to the good folks at the Hillary Grassroots Campaign. Did Condoleezza Rice have a fan club like that?

Clinton Announces Second Tech-Inspired Youth Summit

Speaking to an audience at Monterrey, Mexico's TecMilenio University, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced plans for a second Alliance of Youth Movements summit, to be held in Mexico City in September. The first AYM, held at Columbia Law School this winter, was a Bush-era project that quickly came together out of some shared thinking between Facebook, the U.S. State Department, HowCast, and a few other tech companies. There's sort of two different strains of thinking behind it. The first (and more public) thread is that social-networking tools can help people all over the world resist oppressive governments. At the New York City event this winter, the stars of the day were folks like Oscar Morales, who used Facebook to organize against the FARC guerilla group in Colombia, and the creators of No Mas Chavez, a Facebook group against the Venezuelan leader. The second is more subtext: that the United States can win over hearts and minds online to the American way of thinking. On his way out of Foggy Bottom, Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs James Glassman had wondered aloud how supportive of those "public diplomacy 2.0" efforts the new presidential administration and new Secretary of State would be. Clinton's remarks are after the jump.

Hillary Clinton's "Digital Town Hall of the Americas"



The State Department has announced that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will host a "Digital Town Hall of the Americas" just before this weekend's 5th Summit of the Americas in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago. The "town hall" portion of the events, says State, will consist of Clinton taking questions submitted online, while she's on a stopover in the Dominican Republic on her way to meet Haitian President René Préval. Clinton hits the DR Friday. State's press release came out midday yesterday. That suggests that this event went from planning to execution very quickly. In fact, State has released few details about how one goes about putting questions to Clinton before the event, beyond some general mentions of Ustream, Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, Twitter, Orkut, and something called Hi-5.

But there's a case to be made that State has made a branding error here. Secretary Clinton's "town hall" might be the least interesting part of how State is using multimedia to open up what should be a diplomatically important meeting. The 34 democratically-elected leaders of western hemisphere countries, including President Barack Obama will be meeting to hammer out agreements on the rather vital topic of energy security and environmental sustainability in a time of global economic instability. Past summits -- 1994 in Miami, 1998 in Chile, 2001 in Quebec City, and 2005 in Argentina -- saw concrete working agreements emerge. For example, at was at a Summit of the Americas that the United States and the countries of Latin and South America worked out an arrangement to drop the processing fees on remittances (cash sent home by those living abroad) down from extortionist heights to more manageable levels. Before you start marveling about my intimate knowledge of the history of Summits of the Americas gone by, stop. All that good knowledge and much more is found in a video that the State Department and the up-and-coming HowCast has put together to introduce us to the event. There's another one that makes the case of how I, as an American in the broadest sense, will be impacted by what happens in Port of Spain this weekend. Standard issue State Department propaganda, perhaps. But it's still good information that a citizen of the world want to know. Civic education goes down easily when it comes in the form of well-produced chunks of web video.

The State Department's decision to go the participatory route, no matter how rushed a choice it might have been, signals that State embraces the idea that there's a role for the American public how the United States engages abroad. State, it's worth noting, is actually putting up a promising game online across the board. For one thing, they post full videos of spokesperson Robert Wood's daily press briefings, like the one above, the same day they take place. (As a point of comparison, WhiteHouse.gov posts Robert Gibbs' daily briefings only in transcript form.) The State Department online hub for the summit will live at townhall.america.gov. The will, they say, be posting on-the-scene video interviews with world leaders as the summit takes place.

The Right Pick to Lead State's Public Diplomacy?

Yesterday, the White House announced the nomination of Judith A. McHale to the position of Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs at the State Department. That's a post of particular interest for us here because under the tenure of former Under Secretary James Glassman we saw State experimenting with what Glassman called "Public Diplomacy 2.0" -- that is, engaging with adversaries and allies around the world through Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and other (local and global) high tech mediums in popular use by targeted populations.

But McHale's nomination for the "R" post, as the Under Secretary's slot is known in the secret language of Foggy Bottom, is causing some public diplomacy (PD) advocates some serious agita. The tension in R's role in state is between marketing the American message abroad -- the path that could be said to have been taken by Karen Hughes, the first holder of the post [SEE CORRECTION BELOW] -- and engaging in strategic two-way conversations with the global community, aided where appropriate by the agile use of technology. Glassman went the latter route.

McHale is a former executive with Discovery Communication, the parent company of the Discovery Channel. According to the White House press release, she has worked extensively to broaden Discovery's reach in Africa, Latin America, and Western Europe. McHale also happens to be a generous Democratic donor. The Washington Post's Al Kamen refers to McHale as a "longtime friend" to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and a "Democratic mega-donor."

McHale's apparent lack of diplomatic experience has George Washington University's Mark Lynch calling her nomination "a terrible, terrible selection." (Lynch concedes that "I don't know Judith McHale at all, and obviously have nothing against her personally.") As National Journal's Amy Harder points out, Glassman is less judgmental on his blog. He calls Lynch's criticisms "unfair." The big question, writes Glassman, is "what she thinks the job is." Pending her Senate confirmation, we will, he notes, "soon find out."

Of course, the buck stops with Secretary Clinton on setting the model for how tech-powered public diplomacy will fare in the Obama-era White House. There are signs that she's eager to grow State's PD 2.0 efforts. Tomorrow, in fact, Clinton will be engaging in a "Digital Town Hall" in conjunction with HowCast -- a relationship started under Glassman's tenure.

CORRECTION: An astute reader to point out that I was completely and totally in error calling Karen Hughes the first person to hold the Under Secretary of Public Diplomacy. I misrembered and regret the mistake. Now's a good a time as any to review who's actually held the position. From the State Department:

Name: Evelyn Simonowitz Lieberman
Appointment: Oct 1, 1999
Termination of Appointment: Jan 19, 2001

Name: Charlotte L. Beers
Appointment: Oct 1, 2001
Termination of Appointment: Mar 28, 2003

Name: Margaret DeBardeleben Tutwiler
Appointment: Dec 15, 2003
Termination of Appointment: Jun 16, 2004

Name: Karen P. Hughes
Appointment: Aug 2, 2005
Termination of Appointment: Dec. 14, 2007

Name: James K. Glassman
Appointment: Nominated Dec. 11, 2007

Clinton's Digital Town Hall, Live from the DR

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is set to participate in a live "digital town hall," where she'll take questions submitted to her through Twitter, Facebook, and other means, while on a stop over in the Dominican Republic on her way to the Summit of the Americas in Trinidad and Tobago. The format's fairly similar to that of the Internet-powered "Open for Questions" town hall President Barack Obama held a few weeks back. That affair was, by general consensus, a bit stilted and forced. To see how Clinton handles the novel format, have a watch above.