PdF 2004

May 24, 2004

Tishman Auditorium • New School, New York City, NY

Tagline:

Technology is Changing Politics

Briefing:

Personal Democracy Forum's inaugural conference of Monday, May 24th, 2004 was held in New York City at the New School, Tishman Auditorium and featured a definitive roster of speakers and panelists.

Description:

Money, Votes, and Community

Moveon.org and Dean for America startled the political fundraising establishment by demonstrating that the Internet could generate significant funds. Many of the people who donated online were not the supporters of old. Somehow, new voters were activated with the new medium. This may well be the edge that strategists are looking for, but first they have to figure out how it works, what it changes and whether it makes a real difference. This panel addressed what has worked and what has not, the differences between online and traditional fundraising, whether or not dollars raised online success translate into election day success, and to what degree “community” drives donations.

Bloggers, Journalists and Politicians

For better or worse, the paths of bloggers, journalists and politicians will continue to converge. Bloggers are gaining political clout. Politicians are blogging. Journalists are blogging about politicians. Bloggers are breaking the news — in both senses of the phrase. This panel sought to examine these dynamics, looking for the positive outcomes that a realistic, far-sighted approach might uncover.

New Tools and Dynamics

Outside the spotlight, away from the media, organizations are exploring ways to reconnect communities, debate important issues, mend journalism and keep politicians on the straight and narrow. These efforts include initiatives in Personal Democracy, Civic Journalism and Watchdogs, and they are finding one another — slowly. This panel identified emerging trends, the key players, and the possibilities for a new working arrangement between established political forces and these newly evolved forms of personal democracy.

What’s Next

This panel examined the intersection of politics and the Net, shedding light on what works and what doesn’t, discussing and questioning assumptions, and plotting a course for the remaining months of the 2004 election season.

Sessions:

All Sessions

Money, Votes, and Community

The money race is on. From now until the conventions, campaign strategists are rushing to fill their parties’ coffers with as much cash as possible, and rushing also to spend it, carefully, state by state, county by county, spot by spot. Each message, each thrust and parry is evaluated and measured by pollsters, with a…

Bloggers, Journalists and Politicians

Relations between bloggers, journalists and politicians are often strained. Each of these groups has a different history, set of pressures and intentions. Journalism is objective… or is it? Often these groups’ goals and tactics run at cross purposes. Sometimes, the snobbery of history causes one to disdain the other, to write them off. Such denial…

New Tools and Dynamics

Weblogs, Google and other technologies have entered the vernacular. They’ve already altered how many people learn things and disseminate them. Weblogs, for example, aren’t merely an interesting way for individuals to publish materials online. They are the modern loom, with which people are weaving a new fabric of ideas and opinions. They are the modern…

What’s Next

Theories fail and morph in the harsh light of reality.  Some survive.  Conventional wisdom is often proven wrong in real settings with real voters.  The panelists in this Session have experienced the intersection of politics and the Net first-hand. In this session, we will shed light on what works and what doesn’t, raise some unspoken…
Archived Agenda

8:00AM Registration and Continental Breakfast
8:45-9:00 Welcome:
Andrew Rasiej, Executive Producer
9:00-9:30 Keynote:
Senator Bob Kerrey, President, New School University
9:30-10:45 Session One:
Money, Votes and Community
10:45-11:00 Break
11:00-12:15 Session Two:
Bloggers, Journalists and Politicians
12:15PM Lunch
1:15-2:15 Keynote Interview:
Senator Ron Wyden
Joe Trippi, Former Campaign Manager, Dean for America
2:15-3:30 Session Three:
New Tools and Dynamics
3:30-3:45 Break
3:45-5:00 Session Four:
What's Next
5:00-5:30 Capstone:
Ralph Reed, Southeast Regional Chairman, Bush-Cheney '04
5:30-7:00 Closing Cocktail Reception
NYC Council Member Gale Brewer and Speaker Gifford Miller