Let me give you some background. In late 2003, during the run-up to the Democratic Primaries, a rank outsider, Doctor-turned-Governor Howard Dean, entered the race. Unlike Joe Lieberman, Dick Gephardt, or John Kerry, he didn't have any celebrity dollars, the backing of Senators or establishment support. He only had two things going for him: his principled, consistent opposition to the Iraq War, and thus, in the goldfish-like long-term-memory of the average voter, every military action perpetuated by the United States ever except for the 'good' ones like World War Two (nobody turned round to him, for instance, and said, 'Hey! Ain't you the guy who wanted 50,000 American troops in Kosovo?), and his utilisation of a strange new device for raising money and drumming up support. It was called 'the unternet' or something. Well, it worked surprisingly well, with Dean gaining an enormous amount of money, a truly phenomenal grass-roots presence, and becoming (for a while) the frontrunner, before losing the Iowa Caucus, and fucking up in a typically overblown, grandiose fashion, in the form of the 'Dean Scream', a cracked, tormented cry for help seemingly rising from the depths of his soul at the end of a stump speech in New Hampshire, which he later blamed on some bad flu medication. The Democratic nomination later went to John 'Mr Personality' Kerry, who (unlike George W Bush) conspicuously failed to utilise the internet and thus crashed and burned. A similar thing happened last year, only with the parties reversed, with Rep. Ron Paul (look him up) as a non-hypocritical Howard Dean, McCain as Kerry and Obama as Bush. In fact, according to some estimates, effective control of the internet can account for a 4-6% rise in support for a candidate.
Thus, a well-defined internet presence and a large number of famous, like-minded bloggers is absolutely essential for any modern political party. The three major parties in the United Kingdom are currently engaged on a life-or-death struggle for internet control, one which Labour is currently coming in third place in, and which the Conservatives are triumphing.
Fact:
- Of the top ten most read blogs about British politics on the internet, seven are conservative or libertarian. Two are liberal or socialist.
- Of the top twenty, fifteen are conservative or libertarian. Only three are liberal or socialist.
- Of the top hundred, 48 are conservative or libertarian. 30 are liberal or socialist.
- According to traffic ranking, conservatives.com is the 196,413th most visited site in the world. This isn't great, but is a damn sight better than labourhome.co.uk, currently engaged in a desperate fight for third place with libdems.org.uk: Labour's website is 246,737th, while the Lib Dems are 247,439th.
Essentially, it contains two kinds of articles; ones where any slight hint of dissent towards Gordon Brown among the Labour party is shouted down, and ones where Labour self-congratulatingly pats itself on the back for being inclusive and non-racist, unlike those awful Tories. Quite frankly, it shows how low Labour have sunk if they're hailing some of the authors on the site as their secret weapons against the Tories. They're getting Piers Morgan, disgraced editor of the Daily Mirror and general cockmunch, to write articles, for fuck's sake.
(I'd like to finish on an anecdote to do with Piers Morgan. On the great Radio 4 staple, 'I'm Sorry, I Haven't A Clue', Stephen Fry was asked, during the 'New Definitions for Old Words' round, to come up with a new meaning for 'countryside'. His suggestion? 'The murder of Piers Morgan.' (countryside. Say it out loud and slowly)).
