What stands out when looking at the internet presences of Australian politicians is that the system for getting them online is a complete mess.

Clockwise from left: Facebook pages for Wilson Tuckey, Lindsay Tanner and Kate Ellis, and Tony Abbott's personal page.

Individual websites range in quality from passable to truly awful. Many MPs and Senators don’t have a site of their own, instead having cobbled-together pages featuring simple biographies and bad photos on their party site. Others, meanwhile, have all-singing, all-dancing multimedia experiences.

The kaleidoscopic variety of websites shows most MPs’ sites have been developed for them on a case-by-case basis. It must be costing taxpayers a small fortune.

Surely there is some way of offering a central service out of Parliament House that allows MPs to pick and choose what features they want on their websites and then put it all together for them.

(Full lists: House of Representatives | Senate )

There are also no standard ways of finding your representatives. Website addresses vary wildly: Browyn Bishop is at Bronwyn.com.au, Bruce Scott has named his site after his electorate, at Maranoa.info, while Nicola Roxon is at nicolaroxonmp.com. Some of the sites don’t rate all that well in a Google search so you may not find them if you’re searching for your MP by name.

There are similiar variations in content. Some websites, like those of Chris Bowen, Kate Ellis, or Scott Morrison are bubbling with news feeds, video and pictures, and infused with something at least resembling personality. Or there’s the impossibly dour SimonCrean.net, announcing that the minister works with Kevin Rudd and Labor to do things followed by a list of headlines about sods being turned and trees being planted.

With the election approaching we’ve built some lists housing the web presences of serving politicians. In a separate post we’ve started a list of the politicians who are worth following because they are active and a bit interesting.

But not all MPs need a big web presence. There’s no rule that says they need one, nor do they have to dive into social media and start tweeting and providing status updates on every pothole they fill. Take the senior Liberal Senator, George Brandis, whose web profile is limited to some generic biographical information on party websites. Yet he retains reasonably high profile and influence.

Some people simply aren’t that good at using sites like Twitter and Facebook to reach people, so for some it will be time wasted that could be doing something useful like working on party policy. Or planting trees.

But some members of the Australian Parliament are practically invisible, and this is particularly the case among Senators such as David Feeney, Alan Ferguson, Jacinta Collins and Annette Hurley. Most politicians use the web with varying levels of grace to at least promote their local or national activity. When someone has no discernible presence it does make you wonder what they’re working on.

One aspect of the social media presences is a tendency among even the most active politicians to avoid connecting with people from the other side. MPs should get over this. A Facebook update that “Tony Abbott is now friends with Peter Garrett” would sure spark a bit of fun but if everyone does it it’ll blow over in days and the political tectonics won’t have budged an inch.

Besides, keeping a close eye on your opponents’ Facebook and Twitter profiles could provide some useful intelligence or occasional excellent Parliamentary sledging material.

(Admittedly Facebook doesn’t make it easy by forcing you to hit the “Like” button on a politician’s page. A “Follow” button would help.)

There are several hundred links in the various lists so there are bound to be some omissions, glitches, and holes in the data. Email feedback(at)thepunch.com.au with updates, suggestions, or corrections.

21 comments

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    • Page30LENA says:

      12:06pm | 19/03/12

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    • PatricaDurham22 says:

      08:43am | 30/11/10

      Set your own life time more simple get the loan and all you require.

    • Sam says:

      04:03pm | 15/06/10

      We Still Have MPs who refuse to use e-mail. Lets take some baby steps. Before we move onto compex stuff life websites, twitter, facebook, and all the other difficult stuff.

    • TimT says:

      02:51pm | 15/06/10

      Overpromise, overpay, and underdeliver.

      Isn’t that the maxim for every Federal Labor politician?

    • Harqubus says:

      01:39pm | 15/06/10

      “It must be costing taxpayers a small fortune. ” Do you have any evidence for this statement. Websites are easy. School kids can do it. A decade ago, a then ten year old I know presented her school project on her ISP given website.
      http://www.aph.gov.au/Senate/senators/homepages/index.asp

    • TimT says:

      02:37pm | 15/06/10

      Yeah - but never underestimate the ability of a politician to overpay for something, like a website. Especially if they’re old school and have difficulty understanding the value of the new world of twitter and blogs.

    • Ajent says:

      02:26pm | 15/06/10

      Ah yes, but we aren’t talking about school kids - we are talking about politicians and their advisors…... A lot of them seem to struggle with turning the PC on let alone typing a letter..

    • Ian B says:

      01:21pm | 15/06/10

      Politicians need to be held accountable to their constituents. I’d like to see a web page for every MP ans Senator showing what legislation they vote for and against in a way electors can read. This way it can be seen how effectively the pollies represent those who elect them. While the Whips hold power this is not likely to happen in the short term. Perhaps it will one day.

    • TimT says:

      01:02pm | 15/06/10

      Politicians are a joke and politicians’ twitter and blog pages are a joke too, and indeed the mere presence of politicians’ twitter and blog pages threatens to make twitter and blogs a really big joke. Would I like to have a chance to read propaganda cooked up by anonymous political hacks and then posted on the net under the name of a certain member of parliament or the senate?  Hell, no! I’d rather watch some old lady post pictures of her cat. Which would be both more honest and more intelligent than most polly’s websites.

    • Robert s McCormick says:

      11:34am | 15/06/10

      I don’t care who puts their sites together just so long as they are uniform. Some have emails where they use a mixture of upper & lower cae, some all lower case. Some Senators use their title some don’t, Some you can automatically save their email address some you can’t. It is no wonder the country is going down the gurgeler when these clowns can’t even get simple things right. A for god’s sake spare us from that damned damned Facebook! If we need/want to contact them we only need their email & snail mail addresses none of the other crap they include. They very often simply ignore emails but always reply to snail mail!

    • Mr T says:

      11:09am | 15/06/10

      I say we just censor the lot….  Conroy should be behind me on that…

    • Dale says:

      11:08am | 15/06/10

      I think there should be a site MyPolitician, where it ranks the politicians according to their test scores. Of course it would have to be censored by Conroy too.

    • R S McCormick says:

      12:47pm | 16/06/10

      Joe! What a brilliant idea! If keeping their Party’s endorsement was contingent, and indeed their very right to stand for any Parliamentary seat, on the number of times they actually got up off their over-endowed backsides and actually made an effort to have direct contact with their constituents we would all be better off. How many times have any candidates of any Party come door-knocking in recent years? None. How many have actually held Public Meetings at reasonable hours/days, and no, 7pm on a working week day is not a reasonable hour, so that people can actually attend. Precious few. One ALP candidate had a “Street Corner” Meeting did just prior to the 2007 election but only stayed about 10 minutes.Since then not a peep out of any of them!!

    • Joe says:

      02:46pm | 15/06/10

      We could list sightings in public in their electorate (or state for Senators). I am sure some some would be in single figures after a year.

    • Robert S McCormick says:

      11:50am | 15/06/10

      OH! No not another site where they can tell us how great they are! I don’t give a Tinker’s Cuss whether they are married, single,have brats - in or out of wedlock, Love or hate Betty Windsor-Mounting Batten. I do want to know if they are religious for that is the biggest black mark they can get from me. All I want is for them to work and get results for, of & by Australia instead of their ratbag political party.I also want them to stop selecting ‘career politicians” and forcing them on branches and the general public. Both the ALP & Liberals do this. Some nameless, faceless clown in their Head Offices decide one of their mates (M or F) need to be rewarded so they simply manipulate things so that no-one else gets a look in. I well remember hearing a number of people from different branches being right, royally pissed off when the Party management came from Head Office with their lackey in tow and simply told the branch “Here is your new candidate, you will endorse him/her!”

    • Joe says:

      07:50am | 15/06/10

      Would you realy want the government to be creating the websites for pollies? Image how slow they would be at getting back to you to urgently pull a press release or such from the site. ‘Sorry - please complete form 2b - Request to Alter Content, and wait 10 to 14 days.’

      Also the Building the Education Revolution shows how government beurocracy just costs so much more than private industry to do a poorer job.

      In the US they seem to atleast give them standard domain names like johnmccain.senate.gov. At least we would then know which mps - (esp. Labor senators ) are only working for the party factions and are hiding from their voters.

    • Joe says:

      02:21pm | 15/06/10

      Yea Bob think of New Coke,Beta Max and the Titanic. We had better get the government to run things instead.

      Seriously Bob can you think of another time like the BER when government and private industry have been so openly pitted against each other and Government had done a hugely better job as private industry has done in the BER?

      Remember when Minister Alston got all the flack when he spent $4 million of taxpayers’ money on his departmental web site? As Sen Lundy (ALP) said back then “If this were the private sector, $4 million would cost the Minister his job. ”

    • Bob says:

      01:14pm | 15/06/10

      there is no evidence that the private sector does a better job at anything than the public sector. (look at BP).

    • Paul Colgan

      Paul Colgan says:

      12:42pm | 15/06/10

      Joe: great point.

 

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