25th
Ellen Miller: Make Washington More Like the Web
http://www.sunlightfoundation.com/
The Web is a haven of messy democracy. (Want to see voter engagement and healthy debate? Read any Digg comment thread.) But the ideal of transparency and participation hasn’t yet infiltrated another messy democracy — the US government. That insight led Ellen Miller to cofound the Sunlight Foundation in 2006. The goal was to tap some of the Net’s best-known thinkers in order to make Washington as user-friendly as a Google API. Miller, who previously headed the Center for Responsive Politics, has enlisted the likes of Esther Dyson, Lawrence Lessig, and Craig Newmark to serve as advisers. “Washington politicians like the firewall they have erected,” Miller says. “They will have to be dragged into the 21st century.” The next president could do the pulling — if he adopts the Internet’s values of openness. Miller shares some of her current projects along with grander ideas she hopes the next president will support.
http://www.wired.com/politics/law/magazine/16-10/sl_miller
Crowdsourced Legislation - Why should elected officials be the only ones who get to haggle over legislation? Drafts of bills should be uploaded to wikis, where anyone could edit them before they get debated by the House or Senate.
· One-Click Government - Sure, you can find federal documents online, but good luck making sense of them. Build mashups that seamlessly link politicians, donors, and legislation to give a complete picture of how government works.
Constant Real-Time Video - Encourage phonecam-wielding citizens to attend government meetings and post the proceedings on YouTube.