http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7906923.stm

MPs 'talking, not hearing online'
Page last updated at 02:15 GMT, Tuesday, 24 February 2009

MPs are getting more adept at using the internet — but they tend to see it
as way of talking to rather than hearing from voters, new research suggests.

Attitudes among MPs to new media as a communications tool are too "passive",
the Hansard Society has concluded.

Its research found that although 83% of MPs have a personal website, only
11% of them blog while less than one in four use social networking sites.

New media remained an "untapped area" for political engagement, it said.

US example

All British parties have been studying Barack Obama's use of the internet
during his successful election campaign to attract supporters, focus policy
debates and drive voter registration.

It is thought the Obama campaign employed as many as 95 permanent web staff
and spent heavily on online operations.

A survey of 168 MPs by the Hansard Society — the independent political
research organisation — found members of Parliament were not fully
exploiting the internet's interactive potential.

Its findings suggested MPs see electronic media primarily as a way of
informing the public about their activities and views rather than engaging
with people about them.

It found that younger MPs and those elected more recently were more likely
to use social networking tools.

As for blogs, many MPs believed they did not have the time or resources to
manage one although the reputation of some blogs of being a forum for abuse
was cited as putting some off.

Cabinet minister Hazel Blears attacked political bloggers earlier this year
for fuelling a culture of cynicism about public life.

But former deputy PM John Prescott is a recent convert to blogging,
launching a site to support a fourth Labour term.

Although the potential of the internet is generally not well understood by
MPs, Hansard said the growth in the number of MPs using social networking
sites showed a willingness to learn.

"MPs are transmitting and not receiving," said Andy Williamson, director of
the Society's eDemocracy programme.

"They use the internet as a tool for campaigning and for organising their
supporters, rather than opening up two-way communications with
constituents."

© BBC MMIX
_______________________________________________
Mailing list [email protected]
Archive, settings, or unsubscribe:
https://secure.mysociety.org/admin/lists/mailman/listinfo/developers-public

Reply via email to