Senate Candidate @CoryBooker: What We Know And What We Need To Know

Democratic celebrity Newark Mayor Cory Booker just announced his candidacy for Senate, to be decided in a special election on October 16 to replace the late Senator Frank Lautenberg. We named him one of our Most Innovative People in Democracy because there’s a lot to like: he has pioneered constituent responsiveness through Twitter, he’s a startup founder, he rescues people from burning buildings, and he’s one of the most gifted political orators of our time.

His penchant for digital innovation and speaking skills has led to a non-stop comparison to President Barack Obama. Now for Booker, an obvious future presidential candidate, this comparison is both a blessing and a curse. Like then-Senator Barack Obama, we don’t know a lot about his positions (detailed below). Additionally, Obama promised to reform the culture of Washington, but has been as partisan as every other president in recent memory. We’ll need more than soaring rhetoric to be confident he can accomplish this monumental task.

The Positions We Know That Somehow Differ From The Stock Democratic Platform 

What We Don’t Know

Campaigning and Senate Innovation

There are high hopes that Booker, like his mentor, will break new ground on the campaign trail. The president’s first Chief Technology Officer, Aneesh Chopra, and current candidate for Lt. Governor of Virginia, disclosed his campaign contributions on the software developer social network, GitHub, adding a new level of real-time, trackable information. We await whether Booker will do anything different.

Booker has also promised to “hack the Senate,” but we really have no idea what that means. Does he support more participatory technologies, like Congressman Darrell Issa’s crowdsourcing legislative platform, Project Madison? (Note: We’ve integrated Project Madison into our website. If you’re an expert on Immigration or Tax reform, contribute your ideas here.)

Republican Majority Leader, and fellow Most Innovative Person in Democracy, Eric Cantor, released a Facebook app, Citizen Cosponsor, that allows citizens to show support and track legislation online.

Congress and the Executive branch’s budget is still mostly opaque. There’s no way to track all federal spending online. Last year, the House unanimously passed Darrell Issa’s Data Act, but it failed in the Senate. Would Booker champion the Data Act, or some version of it to make spending transparent?

What about legislative reform? Senator Ron Wyden (CrunchGov Grade: A) supports a new strategy for legislation, wherein states are exempted from complying with new laws if they can find more innovative ways to accomplish the same goals.

I’ll update this post as we learn more; if I’ve left something out, please tweet at me.

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