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Last 3 Posts @ May 9, 2008 4:21:03 PM EDT

Bike Culture Vulture (12 mins ago)

I find bike culture blogs fascinating. I think my all time favourite has to be Copenhagenize which is about cycling in, you guessed it, Copenhagen but today I found t...

Parburypolitica

The African model (34 mins ago)

Norman Geras points to Hopewell Radebe's case for the "Southern African Development Community threatening Robert Mugabe with the use of military force, in order to 're...

Don't trip up

Crewe and Nantwich by-election shout out (36 mins ago)

It’s something of an understatement to say that the by-election in Crewe and Nantwich on 22 May is an important one for us. The Tories are working hard and Dav...

Parburypolitica

Friday, September 14, 2007

Brown welcomes Thatcher - 5 comments

What a nauseating sight. I can't imagine any remotely plausible political strategy behind the event, so I suspect it means nothing: a photo-opportunity arranged by a starry-eyed flunky to make their politician look well-travelled and a 'heavyweight', or, as Thatcher's former private secretary claims, 'a nice gesture' (one pays one's peers). Either way, a sign that senior politicians are a class apart from rest of the population, whatever their country, whatever their politics. Embarrassing? Sure. A sign of future policy direction? Not necessarily.

The thought, however, that this might have been designed for a political purpose, or that Brown believes being a 'conviction politician' is at all worthy in itself, or is a characteristic around which politicians ought to come together, is too horrible to contemplate. So, all in all, I can't agree with Adrian here: the prize of crushing Cameron isn't worth sacrificing anyone's soul.

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Thursday, April 12, 2007

MPs' money to boost understanding of political process - 3 comments

Paul Evans, transpero.net, and Designing for Civil Society have already covered the vote (a fortnight ago, I admit) by MPs for a £3 million allowance to boost the "public understanding of Parliament" through web-sites (and other things). Still, here are a few thoughts of my own.

Firstly, as for the amount of money on offer, £3 million would be a bargain if it really did improve the public understanding of Parliament, or at least, the political process, the making of policy, the scrutiny of bills and government business, etc.

Expressed, however, as £10,000 per MP, it does sound high. Perhaps I'm missing something, but if I can host Bloggers4Labour (at a pinch, I hear you cry) for £1,000 per year, why should the running costs of any single MP's site be so very much higher?

I'd like to criticise the idea that the £3 million must be divided equally, rather than invested in a system (which, in the guise of TheyWorkForYou, already provides a sound basis for future development) upon which all MPs could host their presence. This has the following advantages: first and foremost, it reduces the amount of money spent on web design/web-development: on the wages of those who offer money for old rope, as well as the evenings and weekends of keen youngsters.

This isn't simply about the costs of web development: there should be a strategy - or, at the very least, guidance - on best practice in civic and political engagement. What the online civic/political world is crying out for is a mechanism through which electors and elected can maintain an informed, committed conversation as equals. The vast bulk of web designers, in my experience, know about CSS, graphics,"web usability", and perhaps how to embed a video widget or integrate a blog, but they lack a vision of how a site can, or should, be used to boost popular engagement. MPs are more likely to have a sense of that vision, but are constrained by their inability to speak the same "technical" language as designers. Furthermore, by being placed on a level playing-field, MPs could receive instructions together on making the best of the facilities provided.

I do have a few ideas for what a new-look, hosted, MP web-site would offer (DfCS offer six, most of which I'd mildly go along with), which I might talk about in future, but such a site would be blog-based, albeit with a narrower audience, and much closer interaction and commitment than is usually talked about. I would also try to work around Jack Straw's concerns that sites would simply turn into advertisements and exhortations for the MP and/or party in question (helped, perhaps, by the fact that such things would probably carry little weight with the public), so that the planned restrictions that Paulie rightly decries could ultimately be lifted.

In the meantime, surely organisations like TheyWorkForYou and MySociety should be lobbying in a similar kind of way to convince the government/individual MPs/groups of MPs to make the very best use of this opportunity, and the money as/when it arrives?

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Tuesday, January 02, 2007

Against Nihilism - 4 comments

I should read the Drink Soaked Trots more; here's a great article from Eric (via Paulie), though sadly it may mark his farewell from blogging:
Much has been written by commentators about the so-called arrogance of those "liberals", for want of a better word, who wish to impose Western democracy on other cultures (a straw man in itself) and who wish to protect their own liberal democracies from totalitarian and reactionary forces who will use violence to further their cause. In reality, the more arrogant voice of liberalism is that coming from those downplaying the threats, who big up the (non-existent) threat of an authoritarian centrist government (Labour or Conservative). It's as though they believe that democracy is some sort of natural condition, not susceptible to attack or degradation. That it exists in some other parallel universe, never at threat from external forces in the world.
And also:
Politicians are attacked for providing answers, yet the media do not create the space for sensible public debate in the game of cat and mouse they play. It isn't just the media either, it is a wider malaise and disenchantment within the political class - and by that I mean in the very broad sense of all those who actually pay any attention to politics. Has there ever been a time before when there have been so many people utterly unhinged about contemporary politics?
Read it all, it's intelligent blogging.

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