Monday, October 12, 2009

Election countdown prompts rise of the political campaigning website

Fresh from their party conferences, MPs returning to Parliament today will be ramping up general election plans.

And with both main parties using digital PR to get their messages across it looks like 2010 will truly be the UK’s first ‘internet election’.

Will they be as successful as Barack Obama whose social media campaign team famously stopped tweeting the day he won office, indicating ‘job done’?

In the blue corner we have the campaign site MyConservatives.com, which crashed on launch due to the surge in interest.

It encourages both Tory party members and non-members to take part in campaign activities and social action.

You can donate directly to individual campaigns and you can find out what is going on in your area through a postcode search for local activity.

The site includes YouTube videos and you can upload ‘something about you’ to appear as your profile (so be careful what you say). You can also set up fundraising events and access online ticketing help.

PR Week has already reported industry comment on the ‘cultural challenge’ of getting UK voters to donate to parties online, so that will be a litmus test of the Conservative site as the election countdown gathers pace.

Labour was ahead of the game in launching MembersNet as its campaign website more than a year ago.

Party members and supporters can use it to stay in touch, share opinions and organise and promote events.

Unlike the media splash surrounding the Conservative site launch, MembersNet had a more incremental birth through Labour blogs and word of mouth.

As of today, you can read 8,192 event descriptions, 25,868 blog entries and 67,073 comments – a level of interest that should satisfy even the most ardent political junkie.

Over the next few months it will be interesting to see which of these sites claims victory in the battle of cyberspace campaigning – and whether that success reflects what happens at the ballot box itself.

1 Comments:

At October 12, 2009 at 7:15 AM , Blogger Gareth Weekes said...

Nice one Scott - but don't forget the Lib Dems. Their site looks much more interesting to the uncommitted punter because it concentrates on issues.
If today's front pages are anything to go by Labour seems more interested in knocking the Tories and the Tories' top story attacks the police for arresting one of their MPs. Neither of these items strikes me as being of much interest to Joe or Jo Public.

 

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