Email and the 2004 Campaign
One in ten internet users signed up for political newsletters and news alerts during campaign 2004.
One in ten internet users signed up for political newsletters and news alerts during campaign 2004.
Inauguration organizing takes to the Web.
A new intersection for politics and consumerism has emerged that aspires to ignite an economic backlash to the 2004 election.
As wired Americans increasingly go online for political news and commentary, we find that the internet is contributing to a wider awareness of political views during this year’s campaign season.
DNC Post-debate ads assure that October will be a record month in political online ad spending
The presidential campaign world today regards the internet as an asset for fund-raising, voter-profiling, and insider communicating, but not for advertising, according to the first-ever systematic study of online political ads.
Debates More Important to Young Voters
As the GOP heads into its nominating convention, two new features on the president’s campaign web site warrant attention.
As the Democratic National Convention began, the presence of several dozen accredited bloggers reaped the lion’s share of attention from reporters on the Internet beat. But a two-minute cartoon parody of the presidential race has reaped the lion...
A flap over Der Führer shows how new technology is changing grassroots politicking...