net election
columns
- Google for President
Why the campaigns should advertise in your search results.
Steven Johnson
posted Oct. 13, 2004 - Last-Minute Activism
A lazy man's guide.
Alexander Barnes Dryer
posted Oct. 13, 2004 - The Bombay Ballot
What the U.S. can learn from India's electronic voting machines.
Eric Weiner
posted Sept. 29, 2004 - Not for Broadcast
This year's best political ads are online.
Alexander Barnes Dryer
posted Aug. 25, 2004 - Make Your Own Campaign Ad
This season's homemade political spots are vitriolic—and funny.
Brian Montopoli
posted May 28, 2004 - Search for more net election articles
- Subscribe to the net election RSS feed
- View our complete net election archive
Women Get the Online Vote
By Elizabeth WassermanPosted Friday, Oct. 29, 1999, at 3:30 AM ET
Slate and the Industry Standard join forces to examine the effect of the Internet on Campaign 2000.
However shaky its methodology, online polling is already a reality. Online voting, too, is being debated in a variety of communities.
Now, one Internet company has announced that it will hold an online primary--among a group of voters bigger than the population of California and New York combined: women.
During the week of March 1, 2000, a new Web site called "Majority 2000: Women Count" plans to hold a nationwide primary, designed to gauge the way women will vote in the Super Tuesday primary March 14. Calling itself a "political women's portal for presidential politics," the site is a joint project between Good Housekeeping and Women.com, the New York-based community site. (They became corporate siblings when Women.com merged with Hearst, Good Housekeeping's publisher, in January of this year.) The virtual primary will be the culmination of several months of online surveys designed both to provide information about which political issues are important to women and to determine how women are likely to vote.
Explaining the rationale for the new site, Lisa Stone, programming director for Women.com, says, "It's an underreported fact that women have been the voting majority since 1964." In the 1996 race, President Clinton was re-elected largely because of the 11-point gender split in his favor among women voters. "In the same year that women are poised to take over the Net, we'll also choose who our next president will be," Stone adds.
The Majority 2000 site, which plans to launch next January, is part of a growing trend of powerful voting blocs using the Internet to flex their political muscles. Earlier this month, the AFL-CIO announced that it was partnering with the Massachusetts-based company iBelong to produce a Web service called Workingfamilies.com. Scheduled to launch Dec. 1, Workingfamilies.com will offer all the features of a traditional Internet service provider, plus added facilities to make it easy for members to contact elected officials and corporations. Other efforts include Rock the Vote, aimed at young voters, and Starmedia's soon-to-be-launched Voto 2000, which targets the Latino community.
In August, Oxygen Media announced that it had received $4.5 million from the Markle Foundation to form Oxygen-Markle Plus, a publicly accessible market-research firm designed to measure and reflect women's opinions on a variety of subjects from consumer tastes to public affairs. That project uses the politically connected polling firm of Penn-Schoen & Berland, which has counted Bill Clinton among its clients. For its part, the Good Housekeeping-Women.com project is retaining Harris Interactive, one of the premier online polling firms.
Of course, the political impact of such Net initiatives has yet to be proved. But executives at Good Housekeeping and Women.com say that Elizabeth Dole's withdrawal last week from the 2000 presidential primary convinced them that such a project was necessary. More than 1,800 women responded to an online survey about Dole's candidacy, and many wrote heartfelt responses. Marqueta Bentley, of Oklahoma City, for example, wrote, "I was sad when I heard that Mrs. Dole had pulled from the 2000 Presidential Race. I and many of my friends think that Mrs. Dole has impeccable credentials and would have been a very knowledgeable president. I hope that Mr. Bush will choose Mrs. Dole as his running mate. We are ready to put Mrs. Dole to work in the White House. She has paid her dues politically and proved to be an asset in any position she has held."
"We believe that this is one of the instruments that can help give women the sense that their vote really matters," says Ellen Levine, Good Housekeeping's editor in chief.
feedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
Health & Science
Bristol's 17. Why Should Her Mom Get To Decide the Fate of Her Pregnancy?
Arts & Life
The Deep-
Fried Thrills of HBO's Southern Gothic Vampire Show
News & Politics
POW McCain Refused Release. Why Didn't His Captors Just Kick Him Out?
Business & Tech
Want To Save the Planet? Buy a Cover for Your Pool.
- Today's Headlines
- No One On SWAT Team Wants To Wait In Ventilation Duct With Howard
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 09:00:53 -0400 - [audio] Homicidal Surgeon General May Be Hazardous To Your Health
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 01:00:43 -0400 - Evolutionists Flock To Darwin-Shaped Wall Stain
Fri, 05 Sep 2008 09:00:28 -0400 - » More from the Onion
What's Fair Game?Anne E. Kornblut | What questions would Hillary Clinton have to answer if she were in Sarah Palin's shoes?
Editorial: Disappointment '08
- Robert Novak: Fewer Enemies Than I Thought
- Michael Gerson: McCain's Conventional Speech
- Colbert King: Fenty's Unfulfilled Promises
- Ann Telnaes: White Bread and Circuses
- Today's Headlines
- McCain Ally Moves to Curb Probe of Palin
Sat, 06 Sep 2008 01:36:15 GMT - Patti Davis on What Hillary Should Say Now
Fri, 05 Sep 2008 20:32:47 GMT - Gellman: Resisting the Seduction of Eloquence
Fri, 05 Sep 2008 18:56:47 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- Bye-Bye, Boomers
Fri, 5 September 2008 16:44:27 GMT - Living Down to Expectations
Thu, 4 September 2008 21:11:52 GMT - Busted Brand
Thu, 4 September 2008 18:58:59 GMT - » More from The Root

net election





