This column by Howard Dean appeared in Forbes in May. It was called How the Web is Restoring Democracy to Politics.
It largely went unnoticed, since the campaigns for 08 are getting all the publicity....but I thought what he was saying was vital.
These two paragraphs near the end grabbed my attention.
Repressive governments at the helm of nations that would become world or regional powers face a Hobson's choice. They can allow democracy to flourish on the Internet, or they can destroy the technology that enables their brightest and most determined citizens to network--and fall backward into Third World status.
America can still win the battle for a democratic world. The most important weapon is a free, open, commercially and politically unfettered Internet that empowers ordinary people from across the globe to speak and act in the interests of their own communities.
The Forbes column:
Wikipartia: How the Web is restoring democracy to politicsMore from the column by Dean.
The Internet is the most significant tool for building democracy since the invention of the printing press. People are now easily able to create, discover and connect with networks within hours, anywhere around the globe.
This connectedness is creating a huge shift in power as ordinary citizens decide what's important and most relevant to them. They can network with like-minded individuals to create a technology-enabled global grassroots movement. New local and global communities are being formed that demand two-way communication with and authenticity from their leaders. Technology has dramatically lowered the barriers to entry for ordinary people who are now able to connect and create networks that are not constrained by geographic boundaries. These communities include college students, union workers, ethnic groups and grandparents mobilizing for shared causes or interests.
.."The implications for political parties are tremendous. Political power resides with the public; it has only been loaned to us politicians. It does not work its way from the top down. It grows from the grass roots up.
Many politicians are fighting this idea of the netroot/nutroots, grassroots involvement. I think they do so at their eventual peril.
And this statement is powerful and inspiring.
Political parties have to evolve with the times: If we don't, we lose. Power is shifting away from centralized messaging and toward voters who demand that politicians listen to them before speaking to them. Traditionally, campaigns have relied too much on advertising and not enough on listening to people. Ads and other forms of communicating with voters remain important, but if that's all you do, you can't win. Candidates shouldn't treat online communities like an ATM or expect them to "fall in line." These are networks of real people united by issues they care about. These communities will question leadership constantly, and now they have the power to change the course of campaigns and their outcomes.
And he spoke of what is necessary for campaigns and political websites.
Fundamental trust in your users is the only way to have a successful relationship with them
That is a revolutionary idea, one that politicians are not particularly comfortable with. But it's now the reality. The power in campaigns now belongs as much to these shifting networks of committed citizens as it does to the political establishment.
A month late in reading this, but it is most pertinent right now.