...just scream civic engagement!
By Micah L. Sifry, 10/07/2008 - 11:25pm
Did anyone use MySpace's MyDebates page, the "official online companion to the Presidential Debates"? Alas, not too many. And it looks like only four questions of the millions submitted online were asked by Tom Brokaw, the event's moderator. That, plus the pre-agreed rules that prevented the studio audience from asking follow-up questions or even showing emotion, made the "townhall" style presidential debate more like a wax museum animatronic replica of a townhall. What a shame.
Jose Vargas of the Washington Post just emailed me saying, "I'm writing a column for tomorrow--in your ideal new media world, how should these debates have been conducted with our changing media ecology in mind?" Here's what I wrote him:
In an ideal new media world, we'd open up the debates in several ways, each taking advantage of the web's economy of abundance.
1) We'd invite everyone to submit questions and help filter the best ones to the top, for the moderators to ask, or at least select from. The fact that something like six million questions were submitted to Tom Brokaw shows you how many Americans want to have a say. All the questions should be posted in a public, searchable format, so we the people can see what's on our minds. Even in retrospect, it would be useful to know what people were asking about, and whether the questions Brokaw asked were representative.
2) We'd give the candidates a lot more time to respond. The whole notion that we should judge presidential candidates on how they answer in 90 seconds, or that major issues can be boiled down to 90 seconds, is ridiculous. TV time is scarce, but online there's no need for such arbitrary constraints.
3) We'd involve the public directly, and in real time, in judging how well the candidates are answering the questions being asked, and we'd include that information in aggregate form. Showing a dial-test line from uncommitted voters in Ohio is just one step in that direction. There's no reason why we can't invite everyone to express their responses, in real time, using everything from the web to old fashioned dial-up phones. And that real-time feedback would be fed back into the debate loop, for the candidates to address. If millions of viewers think a candidate isn't really answering the question, maybe this way we'll get them to be more responsive.
4) We'd have a follow-up round, so the public and the candidates could dig deeper, and get past the soundbites. We'd also ask the public to rate the questions asked by the debate moderators, to see if they're actually doing a satisfactory job.The main thing is to take advantage of the open, interactive, and abundant nature of the web. If a candidate can post a 37 minute speech online or a 13 minute documentary (and get millions of views, as Obama has done), then surely we can remake the debates in the age of the Internet to deliver rich, detailed and interactive content to the America people, to help us make up our minds and improve the quality of the national discussion.
It goes without saying, we will have to get control of the debates away from the private corporation known as the Commission on Presidential Debates, which was set up and is still controlled by the two major parties, if any of this is to happen. For them to claim, as Janet Brown, the CPD's executive director, that using four questions out of millions submitted via MySpace was "the best way for new media to intersect with the general election Presidential debates," is just shameful. Bring back the League of Women Voters!
For some reason, this screenshot from MySpace's homepage captures the disconnect for me.

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Recent comments
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2 hours 39 min ago - Yahoo! was not the first
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8 hours 46 min ago - The time it takes to read 3,700 comments...
23 hours 57 min ago - Attention bias
1 day 50 min ago - This is history in the making
1 day 5 hours ago - First off, link is broken
1 day 12 hours ago - diplomacy
1 day 22 hours ago

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Now's the Time to Act
How we decide to use the Internet today is what we'll be left with tomorrow. If we can go from the YouTube debates, 10questions, and the MySpace/MTV dialogues to circa 1996 email questions, it's safe to say we have squandered a great opportunity. Sure the Net has helped candidates raise money and mobilize voters, but is that all we want? What about moving the discussion from soundbites towards substance? And if we can't do it now, at a time when we are defining the Internet's role in politics, what makes us think we'll succeed in the future? It's time for the American people to vote with their mice. Of course, I have some ideas on how to do this, namely http://www.communitycounts.us which incorporates everything above except Micah's live feedback solution, given it's not a televised forum. It's really just a matter of numbers. If we call for something different, we'll get it. I seem to remember one of the candidates saying something like that. Oh ya, "nothing can stand in the power of millions of voices calling for change."