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It’s Election Year And I Have A Crazy Idea

Author: J. Angelo Racoma Category: Blogs and blogging, Philippines, politics, society Tags: blogging, governance, Philippines, politics, society, transparency Views: 9581

Sunday
Feb 11, 2007

2007 is mid-term election season here in the Philippines. Every three years, we get to elect local officials from lowest (barangay, or town) level up to national Senate level (senators have alternating six-year terms). And this is one of those years.

I wasn’t able to register as a voter–I have never done so in my entire life. Those who know me would probably recall that I prefer to be apolitical. I prefer to effect change through other means, and this is mostly because I’ve lost hope in the local political system. I’ve been part of government before, and I can say I had grown further disillusioned and disappointed with how things are run here.

But then again somehow I feel it’s time to make a change, especially with regard to helping our country’s political system grow. I’ve been observing politics in other countries–particularly in the West–and one thing I notice is that their political systems are mostly platform-based. They have strong party systems. In contrast, here in the Philippines politics is mostly personality-based. And we have a weak party system.

If in the US, Democrats stand for one thing and Republicans for another, here in the Philippines, most parties seem to give empty promises of poverty alleviation, job security and economic improvement, but there really is no solid, observable and viable platform. Or at least once people get elected, no one is sure if they ever follow through on their promises/platforms.

Sometimes I’m not sure whom to blame: the politicians or the electorate ourselves. After all, it’s the citizenry that elects people into positions of power.

So here’s my crazy idea

Political blogging is very popular in the west. In fact, a lot of blogs and bloggeres have grown to A-list status in election seasons by outing irregularities or helping out candidates.

As a blogger, I would like to do the same. But given that I do not identify myself with any party or candidate, I would like to invite candidates for this year’s elections (local or national) to collaborate with me on this endeavor.

The concept is simple. I (probably along with a handful of other bloggers) will be writing about candidates, their lives, their political parties, and their platforms during this campaign season. I still have to decide whether it will be on my personal blogs (which have better coverage and readership), or a new site altogether. Now this wouldn’t be the standard press-release like postings. We’ll do it as bloggers do–with honesty, candidness and straightforwardness (with a dash of our own insights, of course). This makes for good _new media_ coverage, no?

But it doesn’t end there. If and once that candidate wins the election, I will continue blogging about his/her activities as an incumbent, and through this we will see if that candidate has indeed followed through on election platforms/promises.

So for instance, he’s a Senatorial candidate who has campaigned on the platform of job creation, the people will know if the committees he’s become part of, the bills he’s authored, and other decisions and activities, are part of improving the employment situation in the country. Or if a candidate for City Mayor runs on the platform of cleaning up the city government of corruption, we will see if his activities once elected would, indeed, reflect that platform.

I’m aware that several local organizations are already focusing on blogging about politics, such as PCIJ, but they’re approaching it from journalists’ perspectives (particularly investigative journalism), and of course there is a difference. I would rather approach it as a citizen. Okay, let me be the devil’s advocate here. Let’s assume that all people are good and that political candidates have their prospective constituents’ best interests in mind.

I’m all ears!

If you’re running for office, let me blog about you, and _with_ you. You can get in touch with me directly here. And I’m hoping communication lines keep open, so I can continue to help with the transparency. After all, elected officials should be accountable to their constituents.

Is anyone willing to be part of this?

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J. Angelo Racoma is a technology journalist and blogger. See more of his blog posts here at racoma.com.ph, commentaries at racoma.net, and Twitter feed at @jangelo.
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Alex

February 11th, 2007 at 6:59 am

Hey, you beat me to this type of post! I was thinking of raising a poll whether bloggers should allow politicians to campaign via their own blogs either by ad space or by posts.

If you need a collaborator for this project, I’m up to it. I have nothing much to do on my free time until post-election time. :D

Hey, weren’t we in campus “politics” back in grade school, Mr. Racoma? Peace!

Reply

jhay

February 11th, 2007 at 9:57 am

Hmm….JC Cuneta and I talked about this during the blogparteeh07. I asked him if the domain http://www.eleksyon07.com was still available? ;)

I’ve been thinking about this as well. It’s great timing especially now that student elections are also coming up here in DLSU-D. Hmm…*puts on thinking cap*

Reply

Max Limpag

February 11th, 2007 at 3:06 pm

JAngelo,
It isn’t a crazy idea, it’s great. We’re actually cooking up something for Cebu, an improvement on something I tried pushing in the 2004 elections. In 2004, I tried setting up Campaign Diaries using Pivot, the blog management software I was using then, where officials and their campaign staff can communicate directly with our readers. There weren’t any takers then. I think the landscape is different now and people are more open to the idea. Now, we’re expanding on it and are setting up a Drupal site for the project.

Reply

j4s0n

February 12th, 2007 at 10:20 pm

Shweet! I already have something in mind. YM me :)

Reply

ia

February 12th, 2007 at 10:47 pm

Halalan sounds nicer than Eleksyon. :P And the question of ethics is akin to PayPerPost, but I know you’ll do just fine. Unless you’re secretly rubbing shoulders with one of the “senatoriables” (gawd that term is horrible! any idea who coined it?) I’d like to see how mainstream people/media/dummies react to this. :D

Reply

jun

February 13th, 2007 at 11:23 am

J. Angelo, we brought this up last Dec and the BlogParteeh (why weren’t you there ?)…

I have a few thoughts:

1. Focus on the senators… This way, anybody can contribute.
2. Have guidelines… No unsubstantiated posts, namecalling or mudslinging… You can rant or rave about what he has done (or not done). And post your opinion about it….. Note: There could also be libel issues here if things get out of hand. Moderated comments, maybe?
3. How do you weed out “pay-per-post” bloggers/commenters? I’m sure the political machinery of the moneyed will be working full time. But their thoughts will also be valuable to get both sides.
4. Treat this as a dry run of 2010 where the stakes are higher.
5. Use a different domain.

Reply

elmer

February 13th, 2007 at 3:12 pm

Neat! or convert them into wikis so people could get back to the candidates profile/interviews/plata porma/etc. incase they win and did nothing but.. btw i registered the domain http://www.MayElection.com if you think this is a good/easy to remember name just let me know.

Reply

J. Angelo Racoma

February 13th, 2007 at 8:59 pm

Great comments, guys. Here’s an idea. It’s obvious that different people are doing different things for this election season (or at least planning to do so). Why don’t we instead set up a network for these different sites?

@Alex, yes I remember we were in campus politics. I guess I just lost interest after I lost. Dammit! Anyway, let’s discuss collaboration plans! A handful of people have already contacted me with their plans.

@Jhay, I’d be glad to see new media in the picture with campus politics! :)

@Max, I guess the new media scene wasn’t as mature back in 2004 as it is now. Same with the tools. I guess it’s easier to set up content management systems and wikis these days.

@Jason, sorry I disappeared during our last YM session! :P Hope to catch you online again soon.

@Ia, why? Because it’s Tagalog and not Filipino? :P Well, _halalan_ does sound better, doesn’t it? Rubbing elbows with senatoriables? I’d love to be able to do that, so I can also lobby for stuff that’s important to me.

@Jun, long story why I wasn’t there. :) #2 – you’re right about moderation. Seriously libelous comments can perhaps be edited/watered-down. But that would appear as not being very transparent, wouldn’t it? But guidelines are definitely a necessity. #3 – I don’t think there’s anything wrong with pay-per-post as long as there is adequate disclosure.

@Elmer, I think some people are already working on wikis. This is a great idea. MayElection.com seems to be a good domain. You could re-use it regardless of the year!

Reply

jun

February 20th, 2007 at 1:41 pm

hi j angelo and those interested in an educated electorate…

please go here Reality TV with a Twist and spread the word….

The people behind it are Communication Foundation for Asia…

Reply

benj

March 2nd, 2007 at 1:10 am

I’m currently blogging about two senatoriables’ (escudero and aquino-oreta) educational platforms – both of them are astoundingly idiotic.

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