It is not a secret that there is a lot of friction between the progressive netroots and many parts of the Democratic party establishment, much of which has been expressed most virulently in the days since Paul Hackett was narrowly defeated in the OH-02. In the interest of trying to foster better communication between our new, netroots constituency and our existing political class, along with the New Politics Institute,
Matt Stoller and I have drafted a summary report about the political blogosphere. My hopes are that it will allow progressives who are currently not familiar with the netroots to begin to better understand what is taking place in the online political world. From that point, I hope we can begin to talk to one another in a far more productive fashion.
The report includes all of the following:
- Background on the political impact of blogs
- The role of right-wing blogs within the Republican Noise Machine
- The emergence of new online progressive constituencies
- A discussion of early conservative netroots dominance
- A discussion on the rise of the progressive netroots
- A look into conservative "blog sprawl"
- A guide for Democratic campaigns to better connect with the netroots
- A summary of the competitive advantages of the left and right-wing blogospheres
- A comprehensive listing of the 100 most trafficked progressive blogs and netroots sites, sorted by traffic
- A companion listing of the 129 conservative blogs and netroots sites with traffic equal to or greater than the 100th ranked liberal blog
The traffic rankings are, by the way, the most comprehensive rankings I, or I believe anyone else, have ever performed. It combines the Blogads and Site Meter rankings--very, very few blogs have been left out. I completed it yesterday, so it is fairly up to date. Of course, these rankings always change quickly, especially in the middle and lower tiers, but it should serve as a useful snapshot.
Check it out. Let me know what you think. We can't work together if we can't talk to each other. We can't talk to each other if we aren't speaking the same language. Hopefully this will help get the ball rolling.
Update: Just got an email from Democratic Underground. Turns out their weekly page views are actually around 7,000,000--bigger than Dailykos. Holy Crap. Much bigger than I thought. I wonder what Free Republic is.