TechCrunch Endorses Obama, McCain

After nearly monthlong vote, TechCrunch picks Obama and McCain.

ByABC News
January 30, 2008, 9:33 AM

Jan. 30, 2008 — -- After nearly a monthlong online voting process, popular tech blog TechCrunch has endorsed Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain as its picks for the Democratic and Republican presidential candidates.

"The blog's editors, readership and affiliates have concluded that in an era of great partisanship Sens. Obama and McCain best reflect the policies, core values and global vision to advocate for technology-based businesses, both large and small, should either candidate be elected president of the United States," the blog's founder and co-editor Michael Arrington said in a statement.

In December, TechCrunch, which is read by more than 400,000 people monthly according to Nielsen/NetRatings, allowed readers to vote on its site for a Republican and a Democratic presidential candidate based on the candidate's stance on issues such as net neutrality and ID theft.

The TechCrunch primary poll captured 15,734 votes. Obama received 61 percent of the votes, while former Sen. John Edwards received 26 percent. Sen. Hillary Clinton received 6 percent. Although Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, received 74 percent of votes, TechCrunch endorsed McCain, who received 16 percent of the votes.

"What really surprised me is how much my readers wanted to see this information. Candidates are seeing that it's not only important to jump on Facebook and YouTube but it's also important to outline their policies on some of these issues," Arrington told ABCNEWS.com in December. "We're not talking about issues that have a huge moral [impact], but they're issues that are really hard to understand."

At primaries.techcrunch.com, readers could vote for a candidate and read more information on his or her positions on issues including technology education, immigration and H1B visas, the wireless spectrum, intellectual property and renewable energy, among others.

The idea for reader-endorsed candidates began after users responded strongly to the site's podcasts with candidates this fall, Arrington said. In the segments, candidates discussed openly, for the most part, according to Arrington their stance on various tech issues.

"The idea just sort of evolved. We reached out to really all of the candidates to do podcasts with them," Arrington said. "It became pretty clear a lot of these issues were pretty important to our readers."

The site featured interviews with several current and past candidates including former Massachusetts Republican Gov. Mitt Romney, Sens. McCain, R-Ariz., Mike Gravel, D-Alaska, and Obama, D-Ill., as well as Edwards of North Carolina.

Arrington said he was surprised that the candidates granted the site such broad access.