On Tue, Oct 6, 2009 at 3:25 PM, Francis Davey <[email protected]> wrote:
> 2009/10/6 Matthew Cain <[email protected]>:
>> There's a significant distinction between advising the government of the day 
>> (regardless of which party is in power) and advising a political party.
>>
>
> As I said, this must be some political nuance I'm missing because I
> don't see it. Sorry. Surely advising people on IT and having a sane
> policy is a good thing. I'd be happy to advise the Tories on anything
> I knew about because it would mean they were a better and more
> effective political party, that in turn can only be good for everyone.

Better at achieving their aims and objectives, perhaps. Which is a
rather sporty leap from 'good for everyone', unless you also believe
the Tories to be a fundamentally public-spirited group.

I'm personally disappointed to see Tom line up behind the Tories,
because I greatly admire his work but have less than zero trust in the
Convervative Party having 'good for everyone' goals.

Maybe I should be looking at it backwards: 'well, if Tom is an example
of a modern Conservative, they can't be all bad'. And I'm sure they're
not all devils! But there's an egalitarianism and openness to much of
'net culture, especially data sharing and transparency efforts, which
stands apart from all I've ever learned about the UK's Conservatives.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ReIAna459sg pretty much captures how I
remember them from last time around...



> I struggle to see how telling people what is a good thing to do can
> ever be bad.

Because it implicitly lends them MySociety's credibility, and provides
that old gang a plausible cover story for why they're the
forward-thinking modernists, even if they're not.

(Post-Iraq war, I am pretty dismayed by the Labour Party too, and have
been asking myself what I think about my friends advising and helping
them in open govt efforts.)

I can only echo Mathew Cain again here:

> There's a significant distinction between advising the government of the day 
> (regardless of which party is in power) and
> advising a political party.

Once a party has found their way into power, getting them good advice
(or at least not willing them to screw things up) is the responsible
way to behave. The US right wing have lost the plot on this point,
w.r.t. Obama. But this isn't the same as lending support for a party's
election campaign, which is what's happening here.

> Surely no-one cares *who* is in power provided they do the right thing?

Which right thing? Governments do a lot of things, and I expect a lot
(not all) of what the Convervatives will do to not be very 'right
thing', regardless of their mysociety-related policies. We can only
hope they make nice JSON feeds documenting it all so that this can be
corrected in subsequent elections...

cheers,

Dan

_______________________________________________
Mailing list [email protected]
Archive, settings, or unsubscribe:
https://secure.mysociety.org/admin/lists/mailman/listinfo/developers-public

Reply via email to