Rep. Mike Honda: Seeing new media in a different lens
My work in the New Media field has focused on making sure that people are receiving the information they want, and in the format they want, so that they can properly express their opinions and participate in the political process. This includes involving people from all walks of life into my work. Social media has a wonderful way of involving people with varied backgrounds and interests, including communities that have language or cultural barriers.
Having innovative programs is critical to this involvement. For example, before the Presidential inauguration last year, I asked my constituents on Facebook to propose ideas on how to reduce educational inequity as a way to receive tickets to the inauguration. This request resulted in ample interest from previously marginalized groups who had never felt remotely accessible to government. Similarly, when I crowdsourced the design of my website, over 100 designers from around the world and thousands of my constituents participated in building a website “for the people, by the people”. These types of media-based participatory government have helped to involve even the least politically active in larger policy decisions.
The American public now expects a new media government – something that was hard to imagine even four years ago. They expect their elected officials to be responsive and dynamic. It is our job to be so.
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