Some thoughts on blogging

Well done to all who organised the Blogging the Election conference on Saturday. I was unable to attend because of a couple of other commitments. I did manage to catch the proceedings on the web and in this morning’s Irish Times (subscription required) – and it looked interesting. The fact that I could not attend highlights the real difficulty for politicians when it comes to blogging - time poverty. It just isn’t easy to grab a few moments in the day to compose your thoughts. Another problem is that much of what is really interesting in Leinster House ie the gossip, the rumours etc are simply unprintable. A TD could write a very entertaining blog if were done anonymously.

Ciarán Cuffe did a good piece in the Times on Saturday, but he probably overstates the effectiveness of blogging as a communications tool. Browsing the web is still a relatively exclusive pursuit. In my experience, many voters still use the Internet for e-mail and that’s about it. All of that may change, especially as if broadband speeds increase and there’s more broadband penetration. The less high-tech approach of knocking on doors, looking the voter in the eye, communicating your message, is still the most effective.

It looks like the PDs and FF will patch things up. Michael Mc, I’m afraid, has cried wolf too many times now. He’ll probably try to salvage a shred of credibility by getting some form of new ethics legislation passed. You can see my thoughts on this in the press release I did this morning.

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2 Responses to “Some thoughts on blogging”

  1. Semper Idem :: Some thoughts on John Gormley’s thoughts on blogging :: October :: 2006 Says:

    [...] John Gormley has an interesting piece on blogging: The fact that I could not attend highlights the real difficulty for politicians when it comes to blogging - time poverty. It just isn’t easy to grab a few moments in the day to compose your thoughts. [...]

  2. Damien Mulley » Blog Archive » So what *can* bloggers do? Says:

    [...] Me? I’d like to see bloggers follow around a politician for a “normal” working day even before the election gets into fill swing. In fact I’d love to see one done for every party and see how things work from all sides. I think it would be good for a blogger to document the average day of a TD and give so many the perspective that we may not have. John Gormley mentions the time poverty most politicians suffer and it would be nice to have someone follow them around to see this. It ain’t an RTE documentary but I think it could be good blog viewing. [...]

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