August 9 1994
One day while surfing the World Wide Web, I ran across a home page for Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA). When I looked it up again the other day, I was dismayed to find the following:
I got a phone call a couple of days later from Chris Casey, a staffer in Senator Kennedy's office. He was *extremely* helpful in explaining things and sorting out what the Senate rules do and don't apply to.
This is (arguably) the first election where electronic communication tools, such as those available on the Internet, will come into play. The Senate Rules Committee has a set of rules governing the use of these communication tools which apply to all standing members of the Senate.
The "election freeze" mentioned in Senator Kennedy's Web home page is a reaction to a Senate rule prohibiting:
An interesting side note: according to Chris, the Senate Rules Committee was going to pull the plug on the *entire* Senate Gopher on of September 9th (or thereabouts). That's the day when the 60 day ban would affect 1/3 of all Senate members, due to upcoming elections. Poof! No more Gopher server, period. Chris said he had to wage a tremendous fight to avoid the shutdown. The compromise is the replacement of all individual Senator information with the single menu entry "Notification - 7/28/94." Retrieval of that file simply states "Senate policy restricts a Senator's use of the Senate Internet servers during the sixty days before an election." The Gopher server and its documents on Senate committees should be up and running through the elections.
The directories at the House of Representatives's Gopher server, gopher.house.gov, for individual members all point to Gopher servers at universities (presumably) within their districts. (Six Representatives are listed there.) Chris doesn't know of any similar restrictions on House franking privileges with respect to the House's Gopher server. Even if the House had the same rules as the Senate, would that mean the the House Gopher would have to remove the pointers to information stored off-site and unrestricted by the rule? {Chuckle}
So, with the House taking a laissez faire approach to member use of the Internet, what's stopping members from renting Web and Gopherspace via name-your-favorite-Internet-service-provider-here? Not much, it seems, other than perhaps ignorance. And what's keeping Senators from doing the same thing? With Senator Kennedy, it's a desire to honor the spirit of the Senate rules. How many other Senators will decide *not* to do the same thing?
Or, how long will it take before the Senate Rules Committee amends its rules to limit explicitly its 60 day ban to official Senate electronic facilities? Or, at the very least, allow members to distribute their information electronically through public service projects like Minnesota E-Democracy?
Following this story of the Senate's struggle with new tools has definitely been interesting. {Hearty laugh}