Here's a D.C. award you didn't see coming
Look, you walk past the FEC building on E Street, and you probably don't think "internet excellence." You think campaign finance reports, maybe a particularly brutal audit. But OpenSecrets, that nonpartisan research organization tracking political money, just snagged a Webby Award. And a People's Voice Award, too, for best website in the Government & Associations category. That's essentially the internet's equivalent of an Oscar. For campaign finance data.
Here's the thing: people outside the Beltway often assume what happens in Washington, D.C. is all backroom deals and legislative sausage-making. And, yes, there's plenty of that. You see it every day over lunch at The Monocle, or in the hushed conversations at the Hay-Adams bar. But the infrastructure behind understanding all that — the data, the disclosure — that's critical. OpenSecrets makes that accessible. Getting recognized for it, especially by a public vote for the People's Voice, suggests that even outside our bubble, people care about transparency.
* **What This Means for Washington, D.C.:** * **Data Validation:** It validates the work of outfits digging into the numbers, showing there's a real audience for it. * **Transparency Matters:** Reinforces the idea that money in politics, while complex, can be understood and tracked. * **Local Pride:** Puts a spotlight on a D.C.-based organization doing crucial work that impacts national conversations.
Think about it: while politicians are arguing over appropriations on the Hill, an organization just a few blocks away is getting recognized for making sense of how they got there. It’s a quiet win for accountability, right here in Washington, D.C.
Jackson Cole, MiTL Sports Desk.
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