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By Nancy Scola, 02/15/2008 - 6:40pm
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.
The seat was made vacant by the unfortunate passing of Congressman Tom Lantos, who represented the district southwest of San Francisco since the early '80s. What are the odds that Lessig might actually throw his hat in the ring? Well, we have to consider that for the globe-trotting academic with a very big microphone as one of the superstars of the tech world, getting sworn in as a freshman member of Congress -- one of a giant California delegation that includes 52 other representatives -- might be something of a downward career move.
That said, it's more fun to focus on the possibility that he might actually make a go of it. What sits on the "he's gonna do it" side of the scale? For one thing, Lessig has become far more politically engaged in recent years. Fairly recently he decided to take a step back from a decade's worth of work on copyright and other creative content issues to focus the next ten years on what he decided was the most pressing issue of our time --government corruption, broadly written.
And why did Lessig make his move? For one reason -- and, frankly, the first one he mentioned in his statement on the topic -- a guy by the name of Barack Obama. Lessig stated his admiration for Obama's "up or out" approach to public service, and pledged to help get him to the White House. Obama has been strong on the issues that Lessig cares about, namely transparency (see, for example, Obama's contracting database bill) and openness (see, for example, his advocacy on behalf of loosening the control over CSPAN debate footage). And Lessig has been a vocal advocate on Obama's behalf, most recently via a pair of videos on why he supports Obama and on Clinton's supposed unelectibility.
Now that the senator from Illinois is in a great position to actually get the big job, serving on Capitol Hill as an ally and guide to a President Obama might be very tempting.
But here's the one bit of evidence that actually finally convinced me that this "Lessig for Congress" thing might actually have legs. Politics is personal, right? And the Draft Lessig for Congress Facebook group -- 548 members and growing quickly -- was launched by Harvard professor John Palfrey, Lessig's colleague and, I think it's fair to say, good friend. Maybe he knows something we don't.
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Lessig on Corruption
What better vantage point than as a member of Congress to witness and combat the corruption that Lessig says he will dedicate the next 10 years of his life to ending?
I'm in Brooklyn, but I'd donate to Lessig for Congress.