Background

Politics in the United States has always been a phenomenon of the crowd. Citizens donate money to campaigns, elect politicians, come together to lobby government officials, etc.

So what's new?

In an Internet age, the traditional ways people band together to influence politics are cheaper and easier than ever... and new crowd sourcing efforts exist, in fact and in theory, that would've been impossible before.

As Jay Rosen notes, politicians are always claiming to involve a crowd of supporters.

We're looking to cut through all that and isolate any instances where "the many" and their contributions--especially their collected ideas, pooled knowledge or voluntary activity--have actually replaced the few, where the crowd's work has proven more effective, or just better than the ideas, knowledge and actions of hired guns, political professionals, or staff...

Only where the power of many is disruptive to the normal pattern in politics--replacing the old practice or generating a new practice--do we have a story worthy of Assignment Zero.

So how should we organize the story? And what examples do we have so far?

CAMPAIGNS: The Internet makes it possible to organize masses of volunteers and raise tons of money without the firm backing of your political party's establishment -- consider Howard Dean's 2004 campaign, which AssignmentZero editor Amanda plans to write about.

LEGISLATION: One Utah legislator successfully experimented with a wiki that enabled constituents to contribute to school voucher legislation, garnering press attention and ultimately easing the bill's passage.

OPEN GOVERNMENT: Porkbusters is a blogger-driven effort to reduce Congressional pork barrel spending. When founders Glenn "Instapundit" Reynolds and N.Z. Bear found out about a secret hold placed on an anti-pork bill in the Senate, they asked their readers to track down the culprit by process of elimination. And they succeeded.

SO WHAT NEXT?

Our goal is a piece of journalism that explains this broad phenomenon.

So are these the best examples we've got, or can we do better? Let's use the assignments on the right to figure that out.

And are the three categories I've used the best way to organize the story? (If not, post your critique or alternative here.)

Questions? Feedback? Suggestions? E-mail me at conor.newassignment@gmail.com


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Team Reporting

Want to contribute? Find an assignment on the right and use the "report here" tab. If you have more questions, check out our FAQ.

Want to contribute? Find an assignment on the right and use the "report here" tab. If you have more questions, check out our FAQ.

ReportingSubmitted byPosted
Crowdsourcing is Simply Good Politics sarahcove1 year 10 weeks ago
Keep It Simple Sean Richardson1 year 15 weeks ago
Around the horn williamglad1 year 16 weeks ago
Where is John Ashcroft When We Need Him? Sean Richardson1 year 16 weeks ago
Politic2.0 Helps Representative Chris Cannon Connect With Citizens Steve Petersen1 year 16 weeks ago
Politic2.0 Helps Representative Chris Cannon Connect With Citizens Steve Petersen1 year 16 weeks ago
Newt Gingrich backpeddles--en espanol (references) RWilliamKing1 year 16 weeks ago
ELECTRONIC CAMPAIGNING FOR PRESIDENT ON THE INTERNET arthurone1 year 16 weeks ago
Barackobama.com, democrats.org, letter-writing lrsachs1 year 16 weeks ago
Campaigns Wikia elyse1 year 16 weeks ago
Meta concept recognized RWilliamKing1 year 17 weeks ago
I receive an email from Joe DeSantis, Communications Director, Gingrich Communications RWilliamKing1 year 17 weeks ago
Tony Blair/YouTube Amy Atkins1 year 17 weeks ago
Political Web 2.0 Shindig in Salt Lake City, Utah on April 11 Steve Petersen1 year 17 weeks ago
Incidently... (relevancy: medium) RWilliamKing1 year 17 weeks ago
Political Web 2.0 Shindig in Salt Lake City, Utah on April 11 Steve Petersen1 year 17 weeks ago
I send an email to Newt's Communications Director for Press Inquiries. RWilliamKing1 year 17 weeks ago
Newt Gingrich backpeddles--en espanol RWilliamKing1 year 17 weeks ago
British approach hogrim1 year 17 weeks ago
The Journey Begins Sean Richardson1 year 17 weeks ago
The State of Georgia and the use of open-community tools by legislators bralkan1 year 17 weeks ago
Is your senator listening? Amanda Michel1 year 18 weeks ago
Is your senator listening? Amy Atkins1 year 18 weeks ago
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