BlogPAC
This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral. (October 2015) |
BlogPAC was a political action committee founded in 2004 by Markos Moulitsas and Jerome Armstrong focused on progressive bloggers and politics online.[1] In 2006, Chris Bowers and Matt Stoller took over BlogPAC from Moulitsas and Armstrong.[2] Instead of channeling money to electoral campaigns, the mission was refocused "to defend the netroots and improve the quality of online activism".[3] In 2007 BlogPAC organized progressive bloggers in several states, and offered microgrants to progressive bloggers through the 50 State Blog Project run by Laura Packard.[4] Later that year, BlogPAC ran a contest to fund progressive entrepreneurs for infrastructure building.[5] In 2009, BlogPAC funded the website software platform SoapBlox.[6] BlogPAC was active until 2012.[7]
References
- ^ "The Blogfather", Alternet, June 15, 2005
- ^ "BlogPAC", DailyKos, June 5, 2006
- ^ "Support the Netroots, Support BlogPAC", Bob Brigham Blog, June 5, 2006
- ^ "Support The 50 State Blog Network", DailyKos, January 10, 2007
- ^ "BlogPac Progressive Entrepreneur Contest", DailyKos, July 10, 2007
- ^ "Saving Soapblox Update and Thanks" Archived December 11, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, OpenLeft, January 12, 2009
- ^ http://docquery.fec.gov/cgi-bin/fecimg/?C00406405