Live from Washington DC, It's Friday Night!

Via the magic that is Twitter and Qik, we're being treated to a front-row seat to what is in all likelihood a congressional first -- members of the House refusing to leave the floor, and inviting reporters, tourists, and staffers to join the party. At issue are legislative proposals to allow domestic offshore oil drilling, and Republicans are staging the protest to demand that the House take up the issue. We'll point you to some coverage of this on-going situation:

Daily Digest: The Well-Oiled Campaign Machine

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.

Daily Digest: "Who's Web Savvy Now?"

Team McCain pwns the Obama campaign by tracking screen captures that show changes to the Democratic candidate's website subsection on Iraq; with an innovative and occassionally funny digital townhall, Rep. John Culberson gets one step closer to be a "real time representative;" JibJib has a new video; we highlight the latest development in the ongoing conservative battle over broadband; and much, much more.

Twitter in a Teacup III: Could this be Progress?

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?

Twitter in a Teacup

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.

Daily Digest: Case Study in "Worth a Try" Activism

With it's last-ditch Night of Facebook Action, the anti-FISA group that was organized to protest Barack Obama's stance on the bill is turning into a case study in "worth a try" activism; Carly Fiorina is on the trail and defending John McCain's tech cred; we take a look at a dust-up over congressional rules on third-party web tools; a Daily Kos diarist pushes back against calls for millenials to take their activism to meat space; and much, much more.

Daily Digest: Tuesday's Basketful of Links

The anti-FISA protests of Barack Obama swamp Google News search results for the bill; is the House of Representatives really trying to hush up Twittering Rep. John Culberson?; British PM Gordon Brown, facing no such restrictions, is reporting back from the G8 Summit in Japan; Obama's recording of his memoir might make some radio-friendly ad-fodder this election cycle; and much, much more.

Daily Digest: The Long Memory of the Net

A YouTube-enabled video retrospective highlights Barack Obama's past statements on the public financing of presidential campaigns; Newt Gingrich's online petition in favor of domestic oil drilling tops a million signatures; LinkedIn's Answer tool is applied to politics; a congressman is streaming live video of his colleagues during today's FISA vote; and more.

CongressTwitterer John Culberson (R-TX) Live on FISA bill vote

The Twittering congressman is now the Qik-ing congressman: Texas Republican Rep. John Culberson is doing live video streaming of interviews with his fellow members of the House during today's vote on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. You have to wonder what his colleagues think when they see John coming.

Daily Digest: Campaigns, Congress Get Experimental

Is John McCain's right-left-and-center blogger outreach strategy savvy or just too contrived?; the Obama campaign gives Google juice to rumors about their candidate; McCain's "virtual town hall" looks a great deal like a conference call; the long record of congressional history makes not of the very first Twitter debate live from the House floor; a Pennsylvania congressman caught in a "gotcha" moment over video about the Iraq warand more.