Let our Congress Tweet
We've been having this ongoing conversation about better access to our government both as a form of transparency and as a way to connect with our Representatives who both serve and ... represent us in Congress. We've even watched as John Culberson (R-TX) and Tim Ryan (D-OH) battled it out in real time over the Energy Bill on Twitter.
This week Culberson has waged his own mini-war against the House for shutting down his twitter activity.
On July 8th Culberson Tweeted
1. " I just learned the Dems are trying to censor Congressmen's ability to use Twitter Qik YouTube Utterz etc - outrageous and I will fight them."
2. "Dem "Supreme Soviet" leadership of House would have to approve every Twitter before I could post it!!!"
3. They want to require prior approval of all posts to any public social media/internet/www site by any member of Congress!!! "
7. " I also must have a preapproved disclaimer on every Tweet that it is an official communication from a federal official for official business"
They go on. He's fighting about this in a very partisan way, but with Tim Ryan in the same boat, its not a partisan issue....(I agree with Dave from TP on this) its a tech issue.
At the risk of sounding like a broken record, our Franking Rules are just so out of step with where we are (and indeed where we're going) that there needs to be some kind of update. Most notably, there should be an update that encompass new technologies that will be created in the next half hour to two years. This whole telenovella actually began as an attempt to make our rules better, if you can believe it...
This began when, in attempts to "get it," ...
"Democratic Representative Michael Capuano sent a letter last month, written in bureaucratese, to a House administrative committee, trying to propose that Congress should create a more official way to represent official congressional communication on the Internet. The letter, dated June 24th, has been widely circulated by a Twitter user and Republican representative named John Culberson, who rallied congressional allies against the proposal...
Capuano is trying to update an existing set of rules that requires House members to submit some web and email communications for approval before being sent. Here’s the text of the rules in question, that I found via nonprofit The Sunlight Foundation’s Open House Project blog post on the matter."
Despite their own convoluted confusion and explanations, the two sides seem to both want the same thing.
"Culberson, as you’ll see if you watch his Qik video, is sincere about his desire to let congress members say whatever they want on any service. Capuano, via his press release, pays homage to the same idea, even if he can’t effectively translate that sentiment into his proposals."
Despite Culberson's partisan blame, he's aligned many supporters from the left as well as the Sunlight Foundation who has started the site Let Our Congress Tweet. While we all seem to be on the same side, its also important to note the members who don't have a side at all on this issue, because they have no idea what the Internets iz. Much less what The Facebook and the Google are up to.
Hopefully, these new dramas will bring to light a better understanding for members who are a bit technophobic or who have staffers that are fearful of losing control. Lord only knows what could happen... Representatives say the Darndest Things!! Holding people's feet to the fire might become the standard, and people like you and me might be able to lobby our members in real time on Facebook through our status updates. Ahh to dream....
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Overhaul Franking
Despite their own convoluted confusion and explanations, the two sides seem to both want the same thing.
I think this is right, and it's a shame that the Republicans are trying to make this a partisan issue instead of working with all of us in the poli-tech community to see a real, useful overhaul of the Franking Rules.
I'm also super-disappointed that this seems to be solely confined to Twitter in all of the messaging and blog posts I've seen about it. Franking is about a whole lot more - blogging, YouTube, social networks. And the real problem here is that technology moves far to fast for a lumbering beast like Congress to keep up. We need some sort of universal change that won't just put a bandaid on the situation now, but free up congress to use all kinds of new technologies as they develop and become adopted by the public.
Congress will never keep up with the market when it comes to creating, adopting, and adapting to new technologies. Since many of those technologies clearly have public value, we need to free up our representatives to make use of them.