Good news! One of my favorite events in the political space is coming to DC on February 20th, and you should join on in — but only if you’re on the Lefty side (sorry, Republican friends and readers!). RootsCamp is a unique opportunity to...
My friend Charles Lenchner has a fascinating new obsession — he’s keeping track of advocacy emails from MoveOn.org and publishing them for the larger advocacy community to check out. The goal? To study an unusually effective list and get...
New website alert! Tucker Carlson’s The Daily Caller officially launched this week, taking its place alongside Politico, HuffingtonPost, Slate, Salon and a host of internet publications fighting for political eyeballs and online ad revenue...
Also published on The Huffington Post and techPresident Are Democrats doomed in 2010, with an energized Republican Party capitalizing on a backlash against a young president’s ambitious agenda to seize control of Congress a la 1994? Not likely...
Here’s a quick update on the recent How Candidates Can Use the Internet to Win in 2010 guide: since it came out on December 9th of last year, readers have downloaded it directly from this site over 1000 times, and I’ve heard anecdotal...
If you missed last month’s virtual book parties for the E-Voter Institute’s About Face, never fear — you can check them out now at EVoterInstitute.com (just scroll down a bit and they’re embedded in the page). A meeting kept...
Though the New Year’s formally begun, we still have plenty of time for some 2009 retrospection. ClickZ’s Kate Kaye provides the latest installment, beginning with her own observations about what mattered in digital politics in the past...
Time for a little crowdsourcing, folks. Jose Antonio Vargas has pulled together his list of the Top Ten Moment online political moments of the past decade (with photos), and you get to vote for your faves. It’s Macaca Moment vs. The Dean Surge...
If you’re reading this via Epolitics.com rather than through your favorite RSS reader, you might notice a slight change: we’re now about 25% wider. In the 3.5 years since E.pol’s initial launch, the proliferation of big flat-screen...
I.e., one that involves cats and laser beams:
Genius! And happy holidays, from the entire e.politics crew.
– cpd