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Weblogs

This category contains 66 posts

Sen. Leahy Playing with Radio?

Stumbling around the Web today I found that staffers for Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, one of the tech-savvier lawmakers in D.C., seem to be playing with Radio as a tool. Interesting.
On a related note, RSS 1.0 feeds for Democratic House members Julia Carson of Indiana, Sam Farr of California and Dutch Ruppersberger of Maryland [...]

Blogging from DC

The Washington bureau of the Christian Science Monitor has started a weblog, Cook’s Capitol, which is a fantastic idea. Regional reporters who cover DC for newspapers across the country should all have blogs, since those reporters tend to specialize in issues that are important back home. For example, the Washington correspondent for a group of [...]

First-n-Main

Joe Newman, a former colleague of mine from the Palm Beach Post who went on to fame and glory at the St. Pete Times and now the Orlando Sentinel, started a blog called First-n-Main that devotes itself mostly to stories about growth, a topic he covers at the Sentinel. No permalinks or RSS feed for [...]

Poynter Gets Political

The Poynter Institute has a new Typepad-powered blog focusing on the intersection of politics and the media. Some interesting stuff from Bill Mitchell and company.

The Governing Weblog

Forget the campaign weblog. The rarer creature – unlikely to be seen, much less perfected – is the governing weblog.
I don’t know what most people expect to become of the campaign weblogs once the election is over, but here’s a guess that virtually none will survive to be incorporated into a government site. And if [...]

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