A Tale of Two Spheres

For information on how to travel to the OH-02 and help Hackett, call his campaign HQ at (513) 735-4310--Chris

In the midst of a full-out progressive blogswarm on Paul Hackett's behalf, conservative blogs, who love to boast of their ability to swarm, have done nothing to help out Schmidt in OH-02. In fact, they aren't even writing about it. Look at the result of these searches from Blog Pulse ( I filtered out the stories about other Paul Hackett's):

  • 614-6/20: 50, including 19 from conservative blogs.
  • 6/21-6/27: 6, all from progressive blogs.
  • 6/28-7/4: 29, including 2 from conservative blogs.
  • 7/5-7/11: 30, including 14 from conservative blogs. Mostly small blogs were discussing the race at this point, but it was enough buzz for larger blogs to soon take notice. Hackett has raised around $16K online at this point.
  • 7/12-7/18: 47, including 7 from conservative blogs. More importantly than the number of blog posts, this is a week where things really started to change in terms of who was writing about Hackett. Now, the progressive blogs writing about Hackett were no longer pretty much just OH-02 and MyDD. Several big names, including Atrios, the Stakeholder, Jesus' General, Swing State Project, and Dailykos diarists jumped in at this point. This set the stage for the storm that was to come.
  • 7/19-7/25: 162, including 11 from conservative blogs. If the previous week had set the stage, Blogopshere Day on July 19 was opening night of the main show. There were as many progressive blog posts on Hackett this week as there had been posts on Hackett from both sides combined since the primary election. It included nearly every major activist progressive blog as well. The Blogswarm had started.
  • Tuesday, July 26: 79, including only 2 from conservative blogs.
  • Wednesday, July 27: 76, including 4 from conservative blogs.
  • Thursday, July 28: 111, including 3 from conservative blogs. This blowout is really getting absurd now.
  • Friday, July 29: 98, including 5 from conservative blogs.
Now, even though it is an excellent resource, Blog Pulse is slow, and won't record Saturday articles for a while. Still, with the info we have, a very clear picture emerges. Since the primary election, there have been 63 conservative blog posts about Paul Hackett, while there have been as many as 683 progressive blog posts about Paul Hackett (some, but not many, of the non-conservative posts were from general news aggregators). Even when the news aggregators are removed, progressives blogs have written roughly ten times as much about this election as conservative blogs. What's more, since Blogopshere Day, the advantage in liberal blog posts has been around 20-1. Even further, the vast majority of conservative blog posts on Hackett over the past two weeks have been from a fairly unknown website, Weapons of Mass Discussion, which averages a whopping 130 page views per day (less than 1,000 per week). By contrast, I believe that literally every single blog in the Liberal Advertising Network, all of which have vastly more traffic than Weapons of Mass Discussion, has discussed Hackett.

Those action-oriented conservative bloggers have completely ignored this race, while us divisive liberals have engaged in an all-out blogswarm that has gone a long way toward making this campaign close. While the MSM cannot help but fawn over the media scalps most often associated with conservative blog influence, the fact is that outside of a select (and admittedly very capable) few, such as Red State, Captain's Quarters and Patrick Ruffini, conservative bloggers are straight up ineffective when it comes to actually influencing electoral politics. How many elections have gone by now where conservative bloggers offered almost nothing in the way of resource support to conservative candidates? If they had jumped into the OH-02 race (or SD-AL and KY-06 special elections for that matter) with the same force as the progressive blogosphere, Hackett would probably still be way, way behind.

They haven't however, and Paul Hackett is now close. However, the same cannot be said of the current capabilities of the progressive and conservative blogospheres. For more on this subject, check this post of mine from January. For a retort to what I imagine would be the conservative response, check out this post



Display:


thanks everyone (none / 0)

I've talked at length with Paul Hackett about the blogs -- he really appreciates everything. Let's finish the job.
by blogswarm on Sat Jul 30, 2005 at 07:09:47 PM EST

Good Observation (none / 0)

I found the lack of coverage on the right wing blogs really interesting and somewhat puzzeling.  Frankly, I thought they were doing the old "ignore it long enough and it won't be a story" conceot in action.  There isn't much positive they can say about it.
by Bonddad on Sat Jul 30, 2005 at 07:53:06 PM EST

Re: Good Observation (none / 0)

You would think with all the red, white and blue pant suits that Schmidt wears, she'd be a little more inspiring to the wingnuts.

Go figure...

by cscs on Sat Jul 30, 2005 at 08:08:25 PM EST
[ Parent ]

Pressure Points (3.00 / 1)

The Wing Nut blogosphere is good at swarming the pressure points of the MSM -- Dan Rather and the Dubious Memos are a classic example. They are taking over the astroturf blast fax operations that the GOP and their robo think tanks are so good at.

But the key is that the wing nut blogs power is limited to intimidating the media -- in the real world, they're just punks banging on keyboards.

The Hackett blogswarm demonstrates the real power of the lefty net roots -- now, if we can coordinate our talking points, we can challenge the wing nuts power over the MSM. And if we can start winning those battles, we can win the war.

by ck on Sat Jul 30, 2005 at 10:13:40 PM EST

Can you verify something. (none / 0)

There is a diary on DailyKos asking phone from home volunteers to stop the calls. Could someone please verify that request for us?
by Tomtech on Sun Jul 31, 2005 at 01:14:04 AM EST


You are not logged in.

In order to post a comment, you must be logged in. If you have a member account, please log in to comment.

If not, you can make an account right here. It's quick and free.