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Politicians in India still don’t take internet seriously

I was reading “The IT Act of India needs to make provision for constituency websites” which talks about the lack of information of the 250,000 electoral constituencies India has (parliamentary/federal/centre, assembly/state and panchayat/local).

There are hardly any note worthy websites of Indian politicians. Few have joined the Twitter and Facebook bandwagon.

  • Somebody like Shashi Tharoor tweeted too often.
  • Gujarat CM, future PM candidate Narendra Modi tweets are very “professional”, people would like to see the human side of him in his tweets .
  • J&K CM Omar Abdullah combines work and play very well and calls a spade a spade way too often.  Tweets just the right amount every day. Omar Abdullah had to shut his blog in 2008, which was unfortunate for the readers.

For a country of India’s size a handful examples of online presence is hardly commendable. Our politicians are too far away from the voters, you can never reach them.

Recently PM met the press (only print though). There was a lot of noise around it. Hindustan Times’s Chairperson Shobhana Bhartia rightly mentioned on a TV program – our PM is not part of any social network.

We need to see the lighter, human side of people in power. It helps the politicians and the citizens. Indians were thrilled to see how the Obamas mingled with the school kids. We can never imagine our politicians doing that with us. They like to carry a grim, grrr face in public. #fail

Sites need to be bilingual or trilingual, not just in English

Being realistic, let our politicians first get their English versions of their site up and running. We will worry about the language versions (the actual vote bank for them) in Phase 2.

BG Mahesh

Internet application ideator and implementor. Been there and done that since early 1990s. I like to present data to the common man in the simplest manner on the internet.

View Comments

  • Rightly said sir. Even after tasting the impact of online campaigns like IPaidaBribe.com., jaagore campaign and the like, the politicians are still shy to accept online media as a launchpad.
    Their taking the new media seriously can lead to a boost in internet-literacy of the whole nation and also help our country keep up with the rest of the world.

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