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Kathy's US Politics Blog

By Kathy Gill, About.com Guide to US Politics since 2004

Wordless Wednesday: Inequality In America

Wednesday August 20, 2008
income chart
The total household income of the upper 1% in 2005 was almost five times greater than that of all households in the bottom 20%, which is the area underneath that bottom green line in the chart above. In 1979, it was only 1.6 times greater.
Click image for more detail.


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Blog Action Day 2008: Poverty

Tuesday August 19, 2008
Blog Action Day, 15 October 2008, is an annual nonprofit event designed to unite the world's bloggers, podcasters and videocasters to discuss the same issue on the same day. Think of it as something like an intellectual flash mob. You don't have to sign up to participate, but right now there are 2,305 sites registered.

This year, the topic is poverty. In 2007, it was the environment. (tip)

Watch the promo clip on Vimeo. Learn more about poverty:
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The Veep Race

Tuesday August 19, 2008
Politico reports that John McCain will name his vice presidential running mate on his 72nd birthday: Friday 29 August. That's also the day after the Democratic National Convention ends.

Speculation about Barack Obama's running mate remains rife. The faithful wait for a text message or email notice.

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Voters Want Well-Rounded Debates

Tuesday August 19, 2008
Zogby International reports that 55% of "likely voters" think Libertarian Presidential nominee Bob Barr should be part of the 2008 Presidential debates. Almost half -- 46% -- also think Ralph Nader should be in the debate party.

A key group in any election, political independents overwhelmingly (69%) want Barr on the stage. And 59% give the nod to Nader, as well. Poll margin of error: +/- 1.7 percentage points

The "Presidential debates" are sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates; it was established by the two major political parties when the League of Women Voters bowed out due to pressures by the parties on format. Today, the Commission requires that a candidate must have the support of 15% of the public to be included in a debate. Catch-22: third party candidates need the national platform to get voter attention, but they must have voter attention to get on the stage.

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Saddleback "Bloopers" From Factcheck.org

Monday August 18, 2008
As I noted on Saturday, this weekend Senators and presumed presidential nominees John McCain and Barack Obama were part of a made-for-TV "joint" appearance at Saddleback Church. About.com's Guide to Liberal Politics, Deborah White, covered the event.

Factcheck.org has just released its analysis. (I confess that I still haven't set aside two hours to watch, although I do have it recorded on our Tivo.)

Read more...
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States Abandoning Touchscreen Voting Equipment

Monday August 18, 2008
State governments in California, Florida, Iowa, Maryland, New Mexico and Tennessee are abandoning practically new electronic touchscreen voting equipment, according to McClatchy. The replacement? Optical scan equipment, meaning that there is a paper ballot marked by the voter herself. That paper ballot is scanned for counting on election day but can be counted by hand if necessary in a re-count.

Paper ballots + optical scan = transparency, a key to both effective government and well-designed interfaces (where we call it making actions visible). Election Data Services says that 55 percent of us will use paper ballots this election and that 4-in-10 will use a different voting system than in 2004.

According to EDS, only about a third of us will use touchscreens this election, compared to more than half in 2006. If you're in a touchscreen state or precinct, I say just vote absentee (if it's legal in your state).

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Will Technology Change The Face Of Fundraising?

Monday August 18, 2008
Information architect Sean Tevis is running for the state house in Kansas. He has no political experience, just a died-in-the-wool idealism. He launched an online fundraising campaign on 16 July. Here's his 13 August report:
By using the ability to collaborate online, connect with an audience, and communicate in a way that, say, mailing a brochure simply can’t, we were able to break the record for the most number of donors to a State Representative campaign in Kansas. Almost all of these donations were less than $10. Almost 50 donations were $1 each from people who know that we need real change, but they’ve been hit too hard by the economy to afford more.

We raised more money from more local donors than my three-term incumbent opponent. It means, too, that I have no strings attached to my funding because it’s not money from lobbyists or special interest groups. Hundreds of friends emailed me when they sent in a small donation. Mike said, “I have not had a job in sixteen months. Eight bucks and change will still move my old Ford Explorer about 40 miles if I drive real carefully. And I’ll be glad to avoid some driving so that your voice is heard in Topeka - LOUDLY, please!”
More from NPR (tip).
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This Day In History: James Meredith

Monday August 18, 2008
On 18 August 1963, James Meredith graduated from the University of Mississippi, the first African-American to do so. His degree: bachelor of arts in political science. Read more about Meredith at at The Edge of the American West. Learn about black civil rights in America (1528-today).
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WALL-E: More Than A Robot Love Story

Sunday August 17, 2008
Scene from Wall-E
© Disney/Pixar
About.com's guide to movies, Rebecca Murray, calls WALL-E the "first guaranteed Oscar nominee of 2008." This accolade also passed through my mind at today's matinee.

One friend had simply said, "Go see it. It's good. That's all." I was expecting a light-hearted robot-centered story. What I did not expect was an animated film that is also a savvy political commentary on the state of the world as personified by our consumer culture/economy.

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Obama To Announce VP Choice Via SMS

Saturday August 16, 2008
cellphone, Getty Images PNC
Photo: Getty Images PNC
In an op-ed in the NYTimes this week, political analyst and consultant Garrett M. Graff talks about why Barack Obama plans to announce his vice presidential choice via text message and email.

What's not clear from the article is if the text message will go only to cellphone numbers in the campaign database or if it will also be broadcast via Twitter.

However, the Twitter announcement makes it look like this is an "insider first" strategy -- in other words, a way to secure cellphone numbers for future broadcast messages:

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