Politics spins a new web - Hopefuls
turn to interactive sites to click with new voters
Politics spins a new web
Hopefuls turn to interactive sites to click with new voters
These candidates have been burned on the Internet. Read their
stories on 13A.
Jim Morrill
When Democrat Larry Kissell started running for Congress a
few months ago, he'd never heard of a couple of guys called
"Anglico" and "Targater," or their new project,
BlueNC.com.
Tech-savvy Republican Vernon Robinson hadn't heard of YouTube
when he launched his congressional campaign.
And Thomas Ravenel, a GOP candidate for S.C. treasurer, never
had a MySpace profile.
Now those sites are helping each of the three tap into money
and support, and in some cases, build a national following.
Though e-mails and Web sites have become common, a growing
number of Carolinas candidates are finding new, interactive
ways to use the Internet. They're riding electronic networks
like surfers swept along in rushing currents.
"Social networking sites are ways for young folks to connect
with each other," says Phil Noble, founder of the Charleston-based
PoliticsOnline. "What smart candidates are doing is injecting
their campaigns into ongoing conversations of millions of people."
Bloggers like those on BlueNC helped bring Kissell to the attention
of activists across the country. Now donors come from far beyond
his 8th District, which runs from Charlotte to Fayetteville.
A recycled TV ad that gained new life online brought Robinson
nearly $200,000 in two weeks for his race in the 13th District,
stretching from Greensboro to Raleigh.
MySpace has helped Ravenel reach a new generation of supporters
in South Carolina. His profile includes his astrological sign
(Leo)and sexual orientation (straight).
Few candidates are as sophisticated about the cyber-possibilities
as Democrat John Edwards, North Carolina's former U.S. senator
and probable 2008 presidential candidate.
His site features podcasts, blogs and chat rooms. Average citizens
upload video questions. Supporters soon will get mobile alerts
on their cell phones.
"We're seeing a change in the way people are engaging,"
says Julie Germany, deputy director of the Washington-based
Institute for Politics, Democracy & the Internet. "People
are engaging online. And they're taking that activism offline."
Spreading the message
Running for Congress two years ago, Robinson aired a TV ad
called "The Twilight Zone." To the soundtrack of the
old TV show, it blasted homosexuals, illegal immigrants and
supporters of abortion rights. It even showed Jesse Jackson
in a police lineup.This year Robinson put it on his Web site.
Bloggers picked it up. So did Rush Limbaugh. "Hardball"
host Chris Matthews found it on YouTube, a nine-month-old Web
site that has 20 million visitors a month.
"If you're an indistinguishable candidate that has the
same blow-dried hair and the same indistinguishable message
... you won't do very well in this medium," says Robinson.
"Conservatives want somebody to take a stand. Liberals
want somebody to take a stand. And they're frustrated when candidates
don't."
Like Robinson, Kissell also has a YouTube following. His video
shows people in his hometown of Biscoe lined up for $1.22-per-gallon
gas, which he subsidized to call attention to rising prices.
The Montgomery County teacher has become popular with liberal
bloggers. He's one of about 20 candidates nationwide endorsed
by Netroots, an alliance of leading Democratic-leaning blogs.
So far that's helped him raise more than $42,000 online. His
own blogs appear on national sites such as the Daily Kos.
"He's exactly why the Netroots say they're in business
... to bring people to the table who otherwise wouldn't be there,"
says U.S. Rep. Artur Davis, an Alabama Democrat who campaigned
with Kissell this month.
That's why James Protzman, a Chapel Hill writer whose screen
name is Anglico, has helped Kissell both online and by hosting
a fundraiser at his home. Protzman helped found the blog BlueNC.
"Larry's definitely caught a lot of interest because,
quite frankly, we don't think the media has done a very good
job covering him," Protzman says. "The light's not
shining on that race yet, so we're trying to shine it there."
21st-century 'soda fountain'
To widen their appeal, S.C. consultant Rod Shealy urged clients
Ravenel and Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer to sign up on MySpace, a two-year-old
site popular with young people.
"It's the soda fountain of today," says Shealy. "Young
people of the '50s congregated at the soda fountain. Today they're
congregating at MySpace and YouTube."
MySpace boasts profiles on more than 50 million people. Other
S.C. candidates -- including Ravenel's 83-year-old opponent
-- have entries in Facebook, a similar site that caters to the
young.
Some politicians use the Net for quick feedback. Robinson tests
messages online before sending them out in direct mail or conventional
ads. "In 36 hours you know whether you did a good job,"
he says.
Robinson's opponent, Democratic Rep. Brad Miller of Raleigh,
also is Net-friendly. Less so is Kissell's rival, Republican
Rep. Robin Hayes of Concord. Asked if he knows much about blogging,
Hayes said, "I know it's something on the Internet."
Noble of PoliticsOnline says politicians are using only a fraction
of the Web's potential.
"The great power of the Internet is its power to reform
politics by finding ways to put people back in charge, and that
goes around power-brokers," he says. "That's its radical
potential. It's democracy with a little 'd.' "
Users Online
A look at two who are involved in the political arena on the
Internet.
THE BLOGGER
Screen name: "The Southern Dem." Slogan: "Sometimes
leaning right... Usually leaning left... Always with an opinion."Who
she really is: Charlotte mom Betsy Muse, 44.
Affiliation: Democrat.
Where she posts: On her own site, The Southern Dem, on BlueNC
and other blogs.
A recent post: "Saturday was the first day that Larry
Kissell and Robin Hayes attended the same campaign event. I've
been working much of the afternoon doing my best to write a
serious piece ...My plans were to do a mature piece devoid of
snark, sarcasm or silly photoshop pictures. Yeah....Like that's
gonna happen."
Why she does it: "Probably what we do best is connect
people with like ideas. ... We fancy ourselves as people who
can have a little more freedom probably than a corporate journalist.
We don't have an editor who says we have to balance the story.
It isn't necessarily about being fair and balanced. I feel like
I'm digging for the truth."
Why Democrats appear to be more active bloggers: "Unfortunately
it's easier to rant than to rave," says Phil Noble of PoliticsOnline,
himself a Democrat. "We've seen Internet activism organized
and directed more effectively against things and candidates
than for."
THE CANDIDATE
Name: Thomas Ravenel, 44.
Affiliation: Republican.
Running for: S.C. state treasurer.
Internet niche: MySpace.
What it says about him: He's single (but in a relationship),
straight, has an athletic build and is a Leo. It also has his
platform and brief bio.
How it differs from his official Web site: "It's a little
hipper."
Why he does it: "We want to stay ahead of the curve. I
think South Carolina, in its policies and adherence to the status
quo ... is one reason we're behind the other 49 states. I'm
all about new approaches."
What the site has done for him: It's helped recruit new volunteers.
Two of his county campaign chairmen were people who signed up
as "friends."
People who've signed to be his "friend": As of last
week, 160, including one purporting to be South Carolina football
coach Steve Spurrier.
Ravenel's rules: "Friends" have to be 18 or older.
No bathing suit pictures allowed.
Notable Web Sites
NETWORKING SITES
--YouTube.com (Launched in December, it allows people to watch
and share videos online).--MySpace.com (Started in 2004, it
allows anyone to post information and photos about themselves
and invites friends to do the same).
LIBERAL BLOGS
--The Southern Dem (thesoutherndem.blogspot.com.)
--BlueNC (bluenc.com)
--Daily Kos (dailykos.com)
--Firedog Lake (firedoglake.com)
CONSERVATIVE BLOGS
--Carolina Conservative Review (carolinaconservativereview.blogspot.com)
--The Conservative Voice (theconservativevoice.com)
--The Locker Room (johnlocke.org/lockerroom)
--The N.C. Conservative (ncconservative.com).
Caught on the Net
Several politicians have felt the sting of Internet politics
this year.
In Connecticut, thousands of people saw YouTube replays of
President Bush appearing to kiss U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman during
the State of the Union. In last month's Democratic primary,
it was a kiss of death. Net activists helped Ned Lamont defeat
Lieberman.
At a rally in Virginia, a video camera caught Republican U.S.
Sen. George Allen referring to a dark-skinned man in the crowd
as "macaca." To critics the remark was racially insensitive.
The resulting furor -- fed by thousands of replays on YouTube
-- forced him to apologize.
In South Carolina, Republican Lt. Gov. Andre Bauer's MySpace
page included "friends" who submitted scantily clad
pictures and it linked to a racy discussion group called "Matt's
Mom is HOTT." The photos and link disappeared after a story
about it in the Greenville News.