Posts Tagged ‘Jaago Re’

Vote Report India Featured in Indian Daily Deccan Herald

Monday, April 20th, 2009

Vote Report India was featured today in a Deccan Herald story on the use of digital technologies in the Indian elections.

Here is the full text of the story –

Campaigning virtually
Click and read
The impact of Internet and mobile technologies on the election campaign has been immense. Metrolife takes a look at the digital initiatives

Most of us at some point or the other have been guilty of whiling away time in front of the social networking sites, exploring profiles with the only legitimate contribution of increasing the hit rate of the sites. But did you ever imagine that the same exercise could end up making us a responsible citizen and an informed voter?
The urban youth is fast taking to the digital media as a means of gathering information on election, so the political parties are pulling up their socks and catering to this cross-section for the month-long general elections to the 15th Lok Sabha.

According to Gaurav Mishra, the co-founder of Vote Report India and also a researcher on Internet and society in emerging countries at Georgetown University, Washington, “This year is primed to be India’s first digital elections as India’s 714 million voters prepare to elect their 543 representatives. They are witness to a range of digital initiatives from political parties, civil society organisations, media houses and even corporates. As a result, some observers are calling it India’s first digital elections. It’s also a test case for the effectiveness of digital technologies in the emerging world.”

Taking the lead is the BJP online initiative through L K Advani, who in his blog, drawing over 150 comments candidly states: “In my own political life spanning six decades, I have enthusiastically embraced every new communication technology — from the early simple Casio digital diary to iPod and iPhone.”

And this phenomenon is giving rise to different aspects of online campaigning that are getting bigger and more intense and definitely more creative.

According to Gaurav’s report, some of the popular online initiatives include Rajesh Jain’s Netcore Solutions, which is running the SMS campaign for the BJP, and has bought an inventory of one billion SMSes for the campaign.

The campaign for Number Criminals in Politics (nocriminals.org) aims to ensure that no political party gives tickets to candidates with criminal antecedents in the 2009 elections. The campaign is effectively using social media
platforms like Facebook and YouTube to spread its message.

Till now, the most successful campaign has been the Jaago Re (jaagore.com) in association with Janaagraha, which started in September 2008 to initiate a voter registration drive in colleges and corporates in 35 cities across the country and to register four million voters.

Says Ashika, involved with Jaago Re and Janaagraha website that does online profiling for candidates standing for election in Bangalore.

“We target urban youth who have access to Internet and SMS and have profiled 85 candidates standing for elections from the three constituencies in Bangalore: North, South and Central, in a very non-partisan way. Not all the candidates have the means to reach out to the public through traditional campaigning, so our website gives all that information including, candidate nomination, assets, criminal records etc.”

And the youth of the City seem to lap it all up. Says Karthik Shetty, a software professional who has been avidly following the elections, “The parties have posted their manifestoes on their websites, which can be read and understood at leisure, making information about their work available on a click.”

The online brouhaha does not end with elections. Many of these web portals are looking at long term transparency and accountability once the government is elected.

Says Gaurav, “Vote Report India (votereport.in) is a collaborative citizen-powered election monitoring platform for the 2009 elections. It aims to not only provide the most complete picture of public opinion in India during the month-long elections, but will also work on increasing transparency and accountability in the Indian election process.”

India’s First Digital Elections Evoke Strong Reactions Online

Friday, April 17th, 2009

The world’s biggest election is underway in India and, as India’s 714 million voters cast their ballots in the month-long elections, they are witness to a range of digital initiatives from political parties, civil society organizations, media houses and even corporates. It’s not surprising, then, that the Indian internet community is abuzz with discussions related to various aspects of the elections.

It’s not only a big election in terms of numbers, it’s a big election for India in terms of timing. Last November, the terrorist attack in Mumbai shook up India’s politically apathetic youngsters and brought them out into the streets. Since then, a series of digital civil society initiatives have sought to channel this newfound sense of civic engagement in the Indian youth into meaningful participation in the political process.

In the run up to the elections, online conversations in India have been charged with this civic consciousness. Transparency campaigns like No Criminals in Politics and Vote Report India and voter registration campaigns like Tata Tea’s Jaago Re have caught the imagination of urban India’s web-savvy youngsters, with their effective use of social media platforms like Facebook and YouTube.

Rashmi Bansal believed that, with the campaign, Tata Tea has taken corporate social responsibility further than most brands do. Rajesh Kumar wondered why only beverage companies do election themed social advertising. Indian Homemaker and Chavvi Sachdev shared their experiences with voter registration. Sanjukta did an interesting interview with Jaago Re campaign coordinator Jasmine Shah.

At the same time, the janus-faced Lead India/ Bleed India campaign by The Times of India has incited mixed reactions.

Anondan tore apart the Lead India print ad while Rajiv Dingra wondered about the rationale behind the Lead India/ Bleed India dichotomy. On Twitter, several users like Deepak and Kanika, found the Bleed India campaign “funny and creative”, while Sumant and Aadisht believed that Bleed India was “buzz gone wrong” and “badly done sarcasm”.

BJP leader Lal Krishna Advani’s Obama-style digital campaign consisting of a blog, a blogger outreach program, and an aggressive internet and mobile advertising element, has also evoked strong reactions online.

Most bloggers, including Sampad Swain, Mayank Dhingra and myself, have praised BJP’s campaign, but some, like blogger-turned columnist Sidin Vadukut have complained that it is an overkill.

The Congress Party’s Bharat Buland campaign, built around the Oscar-winning song Jai Ho (let there be victory) from Slumdog Millionaire, has attracted a lot of criticism from bloggers like Vinod Sharma, especially after the BJP released a parody titled Bhay Ho (let there be fear).

Aparna Ray has captured some of the reactions to the BJP and Congress campaigns in previous posts on Global Voices.

Several bloggers like Rajesh Jain (associated with Friends of BJP), Offstumped are aggressively campaigning for BJP. The #indiavotes09 Twitter feed is dominated by hardcore BJP supporters like @offstumped, @centerofright, and @deadpresident, with only @vimoh and @b50 standing up for Congress.

Beyond the campaigns, bloggers have been critical of BJP’s Hindutva agenda and the Congress party’s obsession with the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty. Bhumika Ghimire has written about these critcisms in a previous Global Voices post.

The Indian internet community has also been abuzz with discussions on the controversy surrounding Varun Gandhi’s inflammatory anti-Muslim speech and subsequent imprisonment, the incidents of shoe-throwing against Congress politicians P Chidambambaram and Naveen Jindal and BJP leader L K Advani, and the election campaigns of writer Shashi Tharoor , danseuse Mallika Sarabhai and ABN AMRO India chief Meera Sanyal.

In the midst of this spirit of civic engagement, some people have become fixated on the misguided idea of “negative voting” under section 49(O). Basically, the idea is that voters should have the right to ask for a re-election by selecting a “none of the above” option, if none of the candidates are acceptable to them. A chain e-mail falsely claimed that such a rule already exists. Many bloggers, like Deva Prasad and Vimoh, strongly supported the idea and even called it a powerful agent of change. A Facebook group and an online petition promoting the idea are getting some traction.

In terms of individual sources, the Outlook India Election Blog is doing a great curation role by linking to important stories from elsewhere. Social networking community IndiPepal has blogs from several well-known analysts. Blogger Chakresh Mishra is doing a series of state-wise pre-poll predictions for the Indian elections. Blogger Manoj Kevalramani is traveling through 11 states in 45 days to get a first-hand impression of the mood on the ground during the election period. The Indian Muslims Blog is writing about the elections from a unique minority perspective. Jai Hind, Indian Election 2009, Indian Elections 2009, Indian Elections, Speak India and Youth Ki Awaaz are some other blogs dedicated to election coverage. BlogAdda and OneVote are doing a great job of aggregating these conversations.