Sent to you by Sean McBride via Google Reader: Top 10 Web Tools for
Election Season [Lifehacker Top 10] via Lifehacker by Kevin Purdy on
10/11/08

It's hard these days to imagine how elections happened before the web
grew to popularity. With all the instant-access news, video, data, and
social networking available in a few seconds' time, election season is
a prime time to dig in and find out where the candidates are getting
and spending money, what's being by and about them and which of it is
true, and how to make sure you get your vote in on Nov. 4. Read on for
a roundup of ten tools to get politically savvy this this election
season and beyond. Photo by ldcross.
10. Compare the candidates.
Unless you're working on a campaign, chances are you don't know where
each candidate stands on every issue. McCain's take on net neutrality?
Barack's stance on school vouchers? SelectSmart's 2008 Presidential
Candidate Selector gives you the skinny on the major-topic stances of
every candidate, including most of the third-party contenders. Those
are the five-minute takes; for a multitude of quotes straight from the
candidates' mouths on the issues, try OnTheIssues.org.
9. Go poll-crazy at FiveThirtyEight.com.
Nate Silver is a total data geek, but he knows how to apply it to
interesting topics. He proved that with Baseball Prospectus, which
projects performance by players and teams, and he's striking out to do
the same for election results. Silver's FiveThirtyEight grabs all the
polls it can find, weighs them based on methodologies and past
accuracy, projects data for regions where it can't find polls, then
runs thousands of simulated elections to come up with a likely outcome.
Silver's site currently has Obama walking away with it; if nothing
else, it'll be interesting to see, come Election Day, how database
projections fared with real people.
8. Get your video fix at YouTube's You Choose '08.
Sure, it's mostly campaign ads, he-said-she-said coverage, and other
videos that are, depending on views, reassuring or infuriating. But
YouTube's You Choose '08 section is a central source of all attacks,
scandals, video evidence of gaffes and quotes, and occasionally,
informative video. Bookmark it and feel better about fast-forwarding
through the ads when they blanket your television in the coming weeks.
7. Follow the money.
Spending's become a much-debated issue, at least in this part of the
race to the White House. Using some cool visualization tools, you can
get all kinds of specific data on the wheres and whats of government
spending. This Google Earth layer adds pinpoints wherever appropriated
money is being sent, although it leans heavily toward military and
homeland security bills. The graph-happy folks at Many Works have put
together a ton of interactive (and usually Java-required) tools,
including this earmarks visualization of per-capita earmark spending.
Now you're not just mad, you're madly informed.
6. See what the candidates said about your hot-button topic.
Google Labs offers two neat search tools that let you get beyond the
basic talking points and read or see the candidates speaking on any
topic. In Quotes lets you type a term and see how Obama and McCain
referenced it in speeches, interviews, and other places. GAudi, the
YouTube-searching audio index tool, does basically the same thing, but
points you to specific points in a video where they said it. Oddly
enough, neither candidate has said anything so far about Google, Gmail,
or YouTube, according to those tools.
5. Find out how and where to vote.
In all the never-ending debate and fervor of an election season, it can
be easy to forget that it's all about, you know, actually showing up
and casting your ballot. Google's Voter Info Map, run as a partnership
with the League of Women Voters makes short work of finding out if you
can still register (today is the last day in New York and others, for
example), where you go to vote, where to grab an absentee ballot, and
your local board of elections web site.
4. Vote early with a no-excuse absentee ballot.
You probably don't know exactly what your schedule will look like on
Election Day, or how crowded your polling place will be. In 28 states,
you can skip the early-morning/lunch break/after-work jam and vote with
an absentee ballot, no excuse required. The Early Voting Information
Center runs down the particulars of getting the jump on your right as a
citizen.
3. Track developing stories on blogs and news sites.
Political veterans (or just jaded political wonks) always see
an "October surprise" in an election year. See what stories and trends
are gaining ground and staying there with two search tools: Microsoft's
Political Streams, part of its Live Labs, follows news stories across
blogs, portals, and other aggregators, tracking how often, and for how
long, it's getting linked and written about. Google's revamped blog
search is more specific to blog-generated articles and the buzz they
generate. Both are worth checking when you're looking to see how
stories are spun, refuted, and propagated across the web.
2 Track fund raising and donations by candidates (and your neighbors).
Want to see what interests, businesses, and individuals the candidates
are helping line the candidates war chests? OpenSecrets.org has maps,
graphs, and details that can keep you busy for days. But, honestly,
it's more fun to see who in your neighborhood is giving to whom.
Luckily, you can get just that specific at Fundrace 2008, a Google Map
mashup run by the Huffington Post blog network (you'll see their
left-leaning post links, but the data is straight-up). You can search
donations by street, city, company, or occupation.
1. Get beyond the spin at FactCheck.org.
Run by the non-partisan, non-profit Annenberg Public Policy Center at
the University of Pennsylvania, FactCheck.org has been a go-to source
for years whenever politicians claims that they, or their opponent, did
or didn't so something that just seems a tad bit unbelievable. You can
track the latest spins and truths by RSS or email alerts, but the site
updates pretty quickly with blow-by-blows after debates, major news
stories, and other events that cry out for a little objective
double-checking.

How do you track the election, the topics at issue, and the galaxy of
data available out there? Share your great election resources and links
in the comments below.



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