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ukyp
02-18-2008, 16:04
http://www.ukyouthparliament.org.uk/203361.html

What does it take to influence public figures? An achievable set of demands, mobilising public support and persistence are all critical factors. The internet is making it easier, cheaper and faster to run successful campaigns than ever before.

In issue 3 of Debatable, Silkie Carlo, Deputy MYP for Brighton and Hove, wrote “It is Rupert Murdoch and the Sun who are now society’s informants. The media . . . has huge powers of public mobilisation.”
Silkie is right, of course. But just as political parties are facing pressure from outside sources, like UKYP, so are the media. It won’t surprise you that only 16% of 18-30s read a national newspaper regularly whilst 31% of 15-24-year-olds use social networking sites. Social networking is more than just a fun way of speaking to friends and uploading embarrassing photos.

The power of social networking is that each friend you know can get the message out to every friend they know, until you’ve contacted far more people than you could ever have spoken to yourself. Votivation (www.votivation.com (http://www.votivation.com/)), like Facebook or MySpace, but with a specific social and political purpose, provides you with just this platform. It’s a way of getting in touch with people based on their interests and views and also their desire to “make a difference”.

Votivation also provides the tools to run successful campaigns. The petitions and polls can be cut and pasted into your own website or blog to reach more people – just as UKYP did with the campaign for better public transport. And you can contact MPs and the largest companies and charities directly, to question their views and policies.

So, as a user of Votivation you can:

1. Create a petition to get your local council to invest more money in services for young people and get it out on websites across your town

2. Listen to what the US presidential hopefuls have to say, show your support and what you think about their policies

3. Sign a petition to get MPs to follow through on the PM’s proposal for UKYP to have a sitting in the House of Commons chamber

4. Declare which X Factor contestant you support and what you think they should be singing next week

5. Send a text to BP and tell them what you think of their environmental policies

But – as you’ll know from reading this article – if you get lots of friends to do it as well – you will be much more influential.

Hamsterwaffle
02-18-2008, 17:11
We all know the web is powerful, look at Mike Huckabee, he was a nobody, then he appeared on youtube in a video with Chuck Norris, and now everyone knows who he is.

matt christodoulou
04-13-2008, 07:43
Web is one of these things nowadays. Everyone uses it, everyone knows the sites and everyone recognises what is on, what.

The web has a huge influence of youths and adults everywhere. Either it is helping with homework or playing a game etc. But the idea is that the web drags people in; the web is very powerful.

kingdino
04-13-2008, 07:53
the web is amazing and powerful, people are hooked on it and companies advertising on it more now as more and more people are using...............

Samantha Stainforth
04-19-2008, 18:46
The Web is extremely powerful.

You do one embarrassing thing. It ends up on YouTube. Everyone knows you

Scary, huh

Sam
xxxx
MYP Candidate for East Riding of Yorkshire

xvictoriax
04-20-2008, 10:48
People become famous because of the internet like Lily Allen on Myspace.

But the internet gives people the chance to hurt people other ways like youtube and social networking so thats pretty powerful and it can make business like Ebay and bands/singers really popular.

It makes and breaks people sometimes.