Should BlogHer Interview The Presidential Candidates?
Should BlogHer Interview The Presidential Candidates? TAKE THE BLOGHER SURVEY
BlogHer’s Election 2008 coverage was created in response to the terrific enthusiasm this community demonstrated while developing our non-partisan 2008 Voter Manifesto, twelve policy questions American women have about health care, Iraq, the economy and the environment.
Frankly, however, our political team is confused by the response of presidential candidates to BlogHer, and to some other organizations and blogs by women. For the past six months, BlogHer has invited seven leading presidential candidates — Democratic and Republican, we’re non-partisan — to participate with BlogHer’s influential, passionate community of now 7.6 million techno-savvy women, who write and read thousands of influential blogs. While our editors, Morra Aarons-Mele and Mary Katharine Ham have made in-roads with the campaigns and we do have another year until Election Day, at this point we’ve been told no, both in words and in actions, as have some other women’s blogs and political groups.
And there’s more — what really confuses us is that:
Instead of the presidential candidates, BlogHer has been offered an opportunity to interview two candidate spouses, Ann Romney and Michelle Obama (more in our action timeline below) Just this week, two presidential campaigns (Senators Clinton and Obama) started marketing new Web sites devoted exclusively to women, even specifically to moms. These are the very women who populate BlogHer’s conferences, visit our sites and write the blogs in our ad network. In fact, if they’re trying to reach moms, the majority of BlogHer’s 1,100 BlogHer Ad Network members are mothers, and most blog about that parenting experience! (More detail, including their recruiting letters to women and moms in our action timeline below.)
So our question is, do we want to be marketed to by presidential campaigns or spoken with? And by whom? We think that if they want to get our votes, candidates themselves should answer our questions in the Voter Manifesto. But only if that’s the course this community supports. So — could you please lead us in the right direction by answering these questions and asking your readers to help us too by posting this poll on your blog? We’ll take all our votes and our voices on this poll right to the presidential campaigns.
Let your voice be heard and Take the BlogHer Survey
Also Read: Writes Like She Talks
Comments
Comment from Catherine Morgan
Time: December 12, 2007, 10:12 pm
More stupid than strange if you ask me. A candidate that doesn’t have women on their side, will not win the campaign.
Thanks for commenting Larry.
Comment from Jill
Time: December 13, 2007, 8:19 am
Thanks for linking, Catherine. I think there’s a lot more here to be said and discussed. It’s just not proportionate. There’s some kind of disconnect. This isn’t about a group of neighborhood women back in the district or something. The BlogHer community is really something else entirely – not to mention bigger than pretty much all but the largest cities that will determine who gets electoral votes.
Comment from Catherine Morgan
Time: December 13, 2007, 10:30 am
I agree Jill. This will be not be just a missed opportunity by any candidate that chooses to over look us…But a missed opportunity that very well may cost the candidate the election.
Comment from Julie Pippert
Time: December 13, 2007, 12:21 pm
I answered the poll. Yes, interview the candidates. Wives are good too, but frankly, I’d like to see SOMEONE ask about domestic, local, and women’s issues and see a candidate answer. Directly.
That they still don’t understand the Internet is a weak excuse. Understanding that millions of people read a Web site can’t be that hard.
BTW, of ALL the candidates I’ve contacted? ONLY John Edwards has replied.
Julie
Using My Words


Comment from Larry
Time: December 12, 2007, 9:48 pm
Strange they would rather go it alone than cooperate with an established group to promote their cause and reach those that probably wouldn’t view their sites.