Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Pubdate: Tue, 28 Apr 1998 Author: Philip J. Trounstine, Mercury News Political Editor CANDIDATES ARE USING THE INTERNET TO PLUG INTO ... A WIRED ELECTORATE Digital citizens' use of technology is having the Net effect of changing politics, bit by bit Californians who are plugged into the Internet -- already more than four in 10 registered voters -- are enjoying an unprecedented explosion of information sources this year as cyber-technology helps to reshape the electoral process. With the extraordinary proliferation of sites on the World Wide Web, Net-savvy voters now can study candidates' stands and ballot propositions, volunteer time and support, follow campaign reporting and analysis, watch television commercials and hear speeches. At the same time, some campaigns are beginning to use the Web to communicate with voters directly by e-mail and offering political surfers the opportunity to register to vote or obtain an absentee ballot. No one is predicting that the exponential increase in the political use of the Net will have a pivotal impact on outcomes in the 1998 elections. But the changes the Internet is effecting -- on voters and campaigns alike -- are widely seen as long-lasting and profound. ``It's an empowering tool,'' said Kim Alexander, director of the California Voter Foundation (www.calvoter.org), one of the first and most comprehensive election sites on the Web. ``It's giving voters a choice. They can say `No' to the TV ads and the direct mail. They can go on the Internet and get information from a variety of sources,'' she said. ``I think that's revolutionary.'' According to Jack Kavanaugh, publisher of Rough and Tumble (www.rtumble.com), one of the most informative free online political sites, candidates who fail to click with Net-smart voters run the risk of appearing out of touch. ``If you have a dorky Web site and you're running for major political office, you have an image problem,'' he said. ``If you have an engaging Web site, that will indicate you are someone who should really be looked at.'' To be sure, all Web sites are not created equal. Some -- like attorney general candidate Bill Lockyer's site (www.lockyerforag.com) -- are nothing more than e-mail links. Others -- like U.S. Sen. Barbara Boxer's (www.boxer98.org), with order blanks for ``Boxerware'' clothing and other items, contribution templates, up-to-date-news and more -- are Java-enriched full-tilt-boogie destinations. ``Everybody knows they have to be there, but nobody knows the full impact they can have with this new technology,'' said Leslie Goodman, of Strategic Communications Services, publisher of politicalaccess (www.politicalaccess.com), one of the most useful political link sites. In addition to the California Voter Foundation, Rough and Tumble and political access, Secretary of State Bill Jones' official site (www.ss.ca.gov) offers a treasure trove of free political information, including an online ballot pamphlet, voting and registration statistics, campaign finance data and even live election results. So dedicated to using the Internet is Jones that he assigned a team of Web masters to teach nearly two dozen staff members in his office how to design Web pages. Tremendous tool And for true political devotees -- willing to pay significant fees -- McClatchy Newspapers' Capitol Alert (www.capitolalert.com) and the National Journal's Hotline (www.cloakroom.com/pubs/hotline) are extensive. Online voters are finding the Internet a tremendous tool. ``It's phenomenal,'' said Lori Christian of Manhattan Beach, who joined Democrat Jane Harman's campaign (www.janeharmanforgovernor.com) after hooking up by e-mail. ``From an information standpoint, you can get all the detail you need, you can find out positions on issues and you can correspond without taking up too much time.'' Christian, 38, Mac user and mother of two with one on the way, is one of those whom Jon Katz described in Wired Magazine (www.hotwired.com/special/citizen) as ``digital citizens (who) embrace rationalism, revere civil liberties and free-market economics and gravitate toward a moderated form of libertarianism.'' According to a recent survey of California by the Field Poll, 42 percent of the state's 14.3 million registered voters use e-mail. Moreover, Field Poll director Mark DiCamillo estimates about three-fourths of e-mail users are registered to vote. These digital citizens -- 77 percent of them white -- are a distinct group. While 47 percent of California voters are registered Democrats and 37 percent are Republicans, Field's e-mail voters are equally divided at 41 percent each. More liberals online Ideologically, however, they are less conservative than their non-Net-savvy counterparts. Nearly half the offline voters say they're conservative, 40 percent say they're middle-of-the-road and only 12 percent call themselves liberal, according to the Field Poll. Among online voters, 28 percent say they're conservative, 48 percent say they're middle-of-the-road and 24 percent say they are liberal. Online voters are younger, more affluent, more educated and weighted with males. According to DiCamillo, they're also more likely to read newspapers and less likely to get their news from television than their non-Net counterparts. They're less partisan, less ideological and more independent than their offline counterparts. Interestingly, the latest Field Poll found that among all likely voters, Attorney General Dan Lungren was leading the pack with 24 percent of the vote, followed by Harman at 17 percent, airline tycoon Al Checchi at 15 percent and Lt. Gov. Gray Davis at 11 percent. But among online voters, Lungren dropped to 20 percent, Harman rose to 19 percent while Checchi and Davis were tied at 10 percent. ``They're not like the rest of the public,'' said DiCamillo of the upscale voters who are digital citizens. Connecting with these digital citizens is virtually uncharted territory in political campaigns. One approach being pioneered this political season is ``e-slate,'' a classic slate mailer that will be sent by e-mail to hundreds of thousands of online voters who, by giving their e-mail addresses to a variety of political sites, are seen as open to receiving political e-mail. Robert Barnes of San Francisco's Informed Voter has signed up several Democratic candidates, including Harman, Cruz Bustamante, Lockyer, Kathleen Connell, Phil Angelides and Delaine Eastin. May reach 1 million ``We don't consider it spam,'' Barnes said. ``We're not selling products or asking for money.'' The mailers will include absentee ballots, polling place locations and information about the candidates who have paid to be a part of the slate mailer, he said. The database, under construction now, may reach 1 million voters ``who have publicly put out their e-mail addresses.'' Lt. Gov. Gray Davis' campaign manager, Garry South, argues that while the Web is a tool to augment campaign communications, ``I think you can overstate the case. I just don't think in the final analysis elections are going to be won or lost based upon who has the best Web site or who gets the most hits on their Web site.'' While Harman, Davis (www.gray-davis.com), Atty. Gen. Dan Lungren (www.lungrenforgovernor.org) and Checchi (www.alchecchi.com) all display favorably selected news stories about themselves on their sites, only Checchi includes negative stories about his opponents. On the other hand, Checchi's site includes a vast array of policy papers on issues, while Harman's offers Real Video versions of her campaign commercials but far less by way of substantive positions. Thus far, only Boxer's site provides visitors a means for making online contributions using a credit card, a feat that requires expensive, secure e-trade technology. Even local candidates have jumped onto the Net. In San Jose's mayoral contest, all three major candidates -- Ron Gonzales, Pat Dando and Kathy Chavez Napoli -- have Web pages (www.rongonzales98.com, www.dandoformayor.com and www.napoliformayor.com). Dando offers campaign statements in English, Spanish and Vietnamese. Napoli's, however, is under construction. For Net surfers in search of impartial information, Rough and Tumble -- which its creator, veteran TV journalist Jack Kavanaugh, bills as ``a daily drive-by on California politics'' -- offers links to important news stories and commentary, most California newspapers, national publications, public interest groups and various official sites. Likewise, politicalaccess provides a vast array of links to media, political organizations, election sites, government agencies and subscription services. ``This site is designed for the press corps covering California elections and consultants attempting to `Wag the Dog, '' Goodman advises on her home page. But the site is a gold mine. For those with the resources -- political professionals, newspapers, lobbyists and legislators -- the Sacramento Bee's Capitol Alert, which charges $300 a year, provides unmatched services such as legislative bill tracking, attorney general's opinions, expert commentary and digests on virtually every state and federal contest in California. The Los Angeles Times and KMEX-TV have created ``Power of the Vote'' (www.latimes.com/HOME/NEWS/POLITICS/KMEXVOTE) as a non-partisan guide to political participation, including useful information on how to register to vote and report irregularities. Uniquely, the site offers information in Spanish and English. To date, candidates who have unleashed negative attacks on one another on television have yet to go negative on the Web. Some political specialists, however, expect that sooner or later the limits of propriety will be tested on the Internet. ``One of the key calculations candidates should be making is how to talk to people who are listening,'' said Goodman. ``But if people think the Internet's best use is to slime voters with negative attack messages, they're missing the point. People don't like to sign on and find smut mail.'' Alexander of the California Voter Foundation has high hopes. ``We're estimating that there will be a million Californians surfing the Web for election information this year,'' she said. ``They're more likely to retain information and to share information. It gives us a chance to return to a new style of grass-roots campaigning.''