No more "nuke the caribou"

Posted by Abby Alger
Wed, 2008-07-30 12:11

Yesterday was the only day I wished I lived in Minnesota. And that’s saying a lot: I complain about the bitter cold of North Carolina.

I sat in on the Heritage Bloggers’ Briefing to listen to Congresswoman Bachmann (R-MN) talk about energy solutions and her recent trip with Republican Leader John Boehner among others to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The refuge is, of course, more commonly known as ANWR or aw-that-place-with-the-cute-caribou-and-stuff.

I liked what Rep. Bachmann had to say.

  • “Congress is not a brain trust” and does not need to create its own solution to every problem, chiefly because “when we [Congress] do meddle, when we do intervene, we usually muck it up.” The only role of Congress is to allow freedom in American energy production, and then the problem will fix itself.
  • “The US is the only country in the world that has made it illegal to access our own energy.” We have more than 88 billion gallons of oil on the outer continental shelf alone, but we’ve made it illegal to tap into it. And Congressional Democrats want to sit on their hands and keep it that way.
  • The area for drilling in ANWR is like “a postage stamp on a football field.” It’s 2000 acres in a 19-million acre refuge and those 2000 acres are pretty desolate and wildlife-free.

But I think there is a better way for Rep. Bachmann--and the others on the trip--to say all those things.

  • Give me videos. Rep. Bachmann is a talented and engaging speaker, so she was able to explain what ANWR looked like. But imagine how much better it would be to watch a video shot by a member of Congress on the trip, narrating the scene. Most people assume ANWR is a pristine snowy wonderland of caribou and, uh, other wintery creatures. Rep. Bachmann said the area for drilling isn't. I think that would have an incredible effect on peoples' opinion. At the very least, it would change the argument from "save the caribou"/"nuke the caribou."
  • Give me photos. Rep. Bachmann has a photo gallery on her site that includes photos from the ANWR trip. It's good, but there are no captions or explanations. Plus, a good number of photos are smiling almost touristy shots. ("Here we are in front of an airplane.") In an age of digital cameras and cheap memory cards, there's no excuse to not have tons of pics available.
  • Give me live feeds. I perked up when I saw Rep. Bob Latta (R-OH) twittering that he was getting ready for the ANWR trip. Why wasn't everyone doing that? Twittering, blogging, even recording a phone call and putting it up as a podcast--we live in a world of immediacy. No one is interested in what happened then; all anyone wants to know is what's happening now.

With energy, Republicans have a good message and a good issue. Now they just need to make sure their communications strategy--especially online--is on par.

Comments

GOP online energy message

Thanks for your post Abby, I enjoyed listening to Rep. Bachmann as well. With regards to online communications, here's where you can find more on the ANWR trip and the fight to increase American energy in general:

American Energy Tour Photos on GOP Leader's Flickr photostream

Blog posts from the trip: day one, day two, day three

Twitter | Twitter | Twitter | Twitter

House Republicans' Real Energy Solutions Website

House Republicans' back to school energy survey that you can embed on your site

Republican Energy Solutions on Blip.tv

House Republicans' energy news widgets

American Energy Act widget

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