Australians head overseas for politics Web sites

Australians looking for political Web sites in the leadup to the war on Iraq headed overseas, with a British and a United States site filling the top two positions on the "most-visited" ladder.

Hitwise, a Web monitoring company, reported the Web site most visited by Australians in its 'political' category on Tuesday - the day US President George Bush issued his final ultimatum to Saddam Hussein - was the Guardian Unlimited's politics site, which rose from a previous ranking of 15th. "Australian users appear keen to follow the fortunes of Tony Blair with more than 4 percent of visitors book marking the website," reports Hitwise. The 'politics' category includes sites of political parties, or that are devoted to expressing views on local or international political issues, but excludes general news sites.

In second place in the political category is the Web site of Michael Moore,, a left-wing US media activist, whose site jumped from 12th position. More than 7 percent of visitors book-marked the anti-war site.

The top Australian site in the political category was Green Left, which rose from sixth to third position. Then came international activist site Move On, followed by the Victorian Electoral Commission.

The World Socialist Website was the sixth most visited political Web site, followed closely by the Australian Greens Homepage. The Australian anti-war site Vicpeace came next, followed by the international anti-war site Antiwar.com. In tenth place was the Australian Labor Party site.

The United Nations homepage also achieved its highest ranking on Tuesday. Hitwise reports that over 20 percent of the visitors then used various resources, such as the UN Treaty Collection, although less than two percent of the visitors clicked through to the International Court of Justice.

However, the beginning of hostilities has proved a boon for business and financial sites, which have been in steady decline since the beginning of the year, according to Hitwise. After an international address from US President George Bush earlier this week, Hitwise recorded a 142 percent surge in traffic to the 'Stocks and Shares' Web site over two days, reversing the trend that saw it falling 20 percent since the beginning of the year.

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Talkback 2 comments

    Not suprising really. With the ...Anonymous -- 21/03/03

    Not suprising really.
    With the government holding back on broadcasting over the internet ( datacasting), far better quality live streaming can be achieved from overseas web sites. At least for those like I that have invested in broadband connection.

    Green Left website 2nd most po ...Anonymous -- 18/07/04

    Green Left website 2nd most popular among young people

    Tessa Court (Executive of Hitwise, an internet measurement service):
    "If you look at the top websites that Australians visited just last week, Michael Moore was the number on, you know global site that they went to. The second one was the Green Left Weekly which has a huge proportion of 18 to 24 year olds."

    Following is the transcript of a snippet of the program on Radio National which mentioned Green Left's popularity among young people...

    Australia Talks Back, 3RN 6pm 7/7/04

    Generation X
    Wednesday 7 July 2004

    Baby Boomers pride themselves on being the protest generation and complain that GEN X is self-centred and apolitical. But are they apolitical or have politicians lost interest in the youth vote?

    [..]

    Tessa Court (Executive of Hitwise, an internet measurement service):
    "If you look at the top websites that Australians visited just last week, Michael Moore was the number on, you know global site that they went to. The second one was the Green Left Weekly which has a huge proportion of 18 to 24 year olds."

    Sandy McCutcheon, presenter:
    "Can you give us an idea of the figures for something like Green Left Weekly, beause a lot of people would say that they thought that was a sort of very marginal ..."

    Tessa Court:
    "Very marginal I mean but of the people who visit the politics category, I mean they're capturing about, you know, 3 per cent. You know there are a lot of sites in the politics category. We're looking at about 300 sites. So you know they're doing quite well."

    --

    There is a sound file of the program on the program's page at http://www.abc.net.au/rn/talks/austback/

    It is well worth listening to as the discussion from some of the "experts" make for some interesting points. The remark by the HITWISE person clearly states that GLW is where a lot of youth stuff is at. She let that slip out and GLW didn't have to pay for the information!

    But the Michael Moore phenomenon is a handy pairing that is worth further consideration. McCutcheon did put his program on an interesting pulse through this discussion.

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