Join us for the San Francisco Net Tuesday on September 9:
Involver: How Nonprofits Can Create Video Campaigns for Social Networks.
How many Americans can interview their U.S. Senator or Representative? With Capitol News Connection’s Ask Your Lawmaker website (www.askyourlawmaker.org) and customizable widgets anyone with an Internet connection can keep their lawmaker accountable. Pioneering a new social journalism, CNC is mashing up traditional shoe-leather reporting with social networking to empower users to ask questions of elected representatives, vote on other user’s questions, listen to audio of a lawmaker’s response, discuss and share the results. Ask Your Lawmaker (AYL) is utilizing the interactivity, customizability and viral nature of Web 2.0 to connect citizens to their Congressional lawmakers and shine a light of transparency on the political process. It is our experience that asking questions other media avoid can help change policy.
Teaming with news staff at local public radio stations and an active citizenry, CNC plans to extend the AYL service to cover state and municipal governments. This includes further customization of the AYL website and widgets so that they allow users to choose between national, state and municipal views, and enable local citizens to get and upload lawmaker or local candidate answers. CNC also intends to create a hyper-personal version that displays a citizen’s own questions and answers. Users can harness a Drupal-powered website, embeddable Flash widgets customizable by state and issue, Google maps and other APIs – in addition to CNC and its 200+ partner stations’ accredited access and editorial experience to create original news stories that build on user dialogue and lawmaker responses. User-created content will be featured on Ask Your Lawmaker, www.cncnews.org and myriad other blogs and sites, as well as broadcast on local public radio stations nationwide. Utilizing new widgets, AYL users will be able to share, discuss and promote the questions they asked of lawmakers as well as the content they created based on those answers on social networks like MySpace and Facebook, and via SMS on cell-phones.
The aim is to build user communities that exist on the local, regional and national level are linked to each other via social networking sites and Ask Your Lawmaker. By publishing and tracking individual and group questions for lawmakers, coupled with the ability to create and publish new content based on those responses, Ask Your Lawmaker is a living example of how local voices can truly set the news and legislative agendas.