Mark Glaser interviews Patrick Ruffini; Rolling Stone glowingly investigates Obama's grassroots game; Mike Connery at TPMCafe; who's winning the Wikipedia primary?; Flickr for Good launches; and the candidates do some, er, interesting things with splash pages.
1 comment | Read more ...Sometime today, I presume, the Obama campaign will reveal its total fundraising haul for the month of February, and everyone will go gaga. Whatever the actual number--$35 million is the low estimate (which would match the Clinton campaign's take), $70 million is Republican consultant and techPresident blogger Patrick Ruffini's plausible prediction (which would be nearly six times John McCain's reported February income)--it's important to put this into more dramatic perspective. He has more individual contributors than the entire large donor pool to federal campaigns and parties in 2000, and nearly as many as in 2004. Already.
8 comments | Read more ...More on young voters in 2008; lost votes in California?; Ben Smith shares the labor and the smarts; Real Clear Politics earns some kudos; Matt Stoller reinvents campaign finance reform; Patrick Leahy wants the Founding Fathers online; what went wrong for Mitt Romney; McCain aide shares some secrets; GOP "money-bomb" bombs; Josh reports from Italy; our favorite videos; and some reality checks to end the week.
1 comment | Read more ...After the YouTube-CNN Debate, I spent some time in the "Spin Room" talking with folks about their thoughts on the Republican debate. (I did the same thing at the Democratic YouTube debate earlier this year.)
Below, find short vlogs from Ron Paul, Duncan Hunter, Patrick Ruffini, Robert Bluey, Mary Katharine Ham, James Kotecki, Jose Antonio Vargas, Meghan McCain, Charlie Smith, and, wait for it... Chuck Norris.
Ready.
Set.
Go.
Voting on 10Questions closed yesterday with a huge surge in participation...and a number of last-minute submissions, including one that appears to have climbed into the top ten. And that raises an important question, was the process fair?
4 comments | Read more ...Next Wednesday the founders of TechRepublican.com, led by David All, will be leading the first-ever Modern Media Strategies workshop. The event is designed to teach conservative activists and Hill staffers about new media (or, as All calls it, “modern media”) and how to use the web the way the liberals do. It's the latest in a string of projects unleashed by a small group of online activists that has struck a chord with mainstream conservatives.
login or register to post comments | Read more ...The open-sourcing of debate planning; the debate on the online Right; the demographics of the online Left; the ongoing decline of newspapers; another exploitative video; and whose website is winning the most attention...
login or register to post comments | Read more ...The techPresident team left YearlyKos yesterday evening, before Markos Moulitsas's keynote, and we're taking today off to catch our breath and nurse our sore feet (it was not for nothing that some were calling YK the "Blogger Exercise Conference"). Here are a couple of quick thoughts and quick links in case you can't enjoy a Sunday in August without your techPresident hit
1 comment | Read more ...The Web on the Candidates
Kate Phillips of The New York Times' The Caucus rounds up the netroots' reaction to John Edwards' decision not to participate in a Fox News-sponsored debate in Nevada next August. Some at TPMCafe see the decision as a sign that Edwards "is making a serious bid to be the 'netroots' candidate." With praise for the decision coming from Atrios, Matt Stoller, and others, Edwards is certainly scoring some netroots points.
Giuliani advisor Patrick Ruffini lists his favorite '08 blogs that, he says, "will be in the thousands of visits by the time Iowa and New Hampshire roll around." The list includes Race42008, Eyeon08, GOP Progress, and the Brody File.
login or register to post comments | Read more ...A Rightwingnews.com poll suggests that Duncan Hunter has gained significant new support among the conservative netroots. Newt Gingrich was the most popular potential candidate, followed by Hunter and Mitt Romney. Chuck Hagel, George Pataki, and John McCain were very unpopular among the 230 participants in the poll.
The Politico and MSNBC are sponsoring the first GOP debate at the Reagan Library in Simi Valley, CA on May 3. It will be broadcast online on the Politico's web site, where viewers can submit questions to the candidates.
login or register to post comments | Read more ...PdF Conference 2008
Recent blog posts
- OMG! WARNING: Over the top, offensive humor!
- Obama Delegates Learn To Self-Organize
- Republican Social Media Site Tries to Turn "Yes We Can" Back on Obama
- Voter File 2.0: Catalist, Democratic Tool
- Clinton Going Down, While the Web Dreams of an Obama Win
- Daily Digest: Can We Ask?
- Favorite Videos of the Week: It's Hard Out Here For A Chick [UPDATE]
- Daily Digest: The Next Right Gets Grassroots
- Political Implications of the Cognitive Surplus
- What is Obama's Movement?



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