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Daily Kos
Blog focused on left-wing American politics
Blog focused on left-wing American politics
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Daily Kos |
| logo | Daily Kos new logo.png |
| url | |
| commercial | Yes |
| type | Political blog |
| language | English |
| owner | Kos Media, LLC |
| author | Markos Moulitsas |
| launch_date | |
| current_status | Active |
Daily Kos ( ) is a group blog and internet forum focused on the U.S. Democratic Party and on liberal and progressive American politics. The site publishes blog posts, polls, election and campaign fundraising data, and is considered an example of "netroots" activism.
Daily Kos was founded in 2002 by Markos Moulitsas and takes the name Kos from the last syllable of his first name, his nickname while in the military.
History
Daily Kos was founded in May 2002 by Markos Moulitsas in Berkeley, California.
The Daily Kos is funded by advertising, fundraising, and donations.
As of September 2014, Daily Kos has had an average weekday traffic of hundreds of thousands.
The website ran on the Scoop content management system until 2011 when it moved to its own custom content management system referred to as "DK 4.0". In 2016 and 2017, the Trump presidency brought out huge support for the blog, with more than half a million in direct donations being received from their email campaigns.
In 2018, the Daily Kos launched Civiqs, a division of the blog that provides political polling data from volunteer participants.
In 2019 Prism, an independent, non-profit publication focused on covering injustice from the perspective of underrepresented groups, became an affiliate publication of the Daily Kos.
In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Daily Kos owner Kos Media LLC received $1.4 million in federally backed small business loans from Newtek Small Business Finance as part of the Paycheck Protection Program.
Polling
Daily Kos had previously partnered with Research 2000 to produce polling for presidential, congressional and gubernatorial races across the country. In June 2010, Daily Kos terminated the relationship after finding that the data showed statistical anomalies consistent with deliberate falsification and announced its intention to sue the polling firm.
On November 30, 2010, an agreement to a settlement began as lawyers for the Plaintiff filed a status report indicating that both parties were "in agreement as to the contours of a proper settlement but are still in the process of determining whether the execution of the proposed terms is feasible". In May 2011, The Huffington Post reported that Research 2000 pollster Del Ali agreed to settle the lawsuit and make payments to Daily Kos.
The Daily Kos Elections tracked redistricting in the United States, forecasted Electoral College results, and provided polling data for elections.
YearlyKos convention
Main article: Netroots Nation
In June 2006, members of Daily Kos organized the first ever Daily Kos political blogger convention, called YearlyKos, in Las Vegas, Nevada. The event was attended by approximately 1000 bloggers, and featured appearances by prominent Democrats such as Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, California Senator Barbara Boxer, General Wesley Clark, Governors Mark Warner, Bill Richardson, Tom Vilsack and DNC Chair Howard Dean. The event was widely covered in the traditional media, including Capitol Hill Blue, The Boston Globe and MSNBC. C-SPAN also carried portions of the convention.
Political activity
Daily Kos has been described variously as progressive, left-leaning and far-left.
In addition to being a blogging, news, and digital media platform, Daily Kos is a political organization. For instance, The New York Times reported that James Thompson, the April 2017 Democratic candidate for the vacant House seat from , "was helped by nearly $150,000 from Daily Kos, ... and some more modest contributions from a group aligned with Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont". OpenSecrets reported that "the liberal Daily Kos endorsed Thompson and sent out a fundraising plea, which has so far garnered $178,000 in donations, according to its fundraising page."
Daily Kos has endorsed notable Democratic candidates in state and national races, including Hillary Clinton in the run-up to the 2016 U.S. presidential election, and candidate Jon Ossoff, who ran for in its 2017 special election. Ossoff received more than $1 million raised on Daily Kos.
In 2004, the site launched the dKosopedia. It was a wiki, using the MediaWiki software, and described as "a political encyclopedia ... written from a left/progressive/liberal/Democratic point of view while also attempting to fairly acknowledge the other side's take". It grew to more than 14,000 articles but has since been discontinued.
The site has also participated in mass digital campaigns to elected officials over ActionNetwork.org with prominent organizational partners including Saphron Initiative, Futures PAC, Democracy for America's Advocacy Fund, and More Perfect Union.
Reception
In 2008, Time magazine readers named Daily Kos the second-best blog. In 2009, Time listed Daily Kos in its "Most Overrated Blogs" section due to the loss of its mission, fighting the "oppressive and war-crazed" Republican administration, during Democrat Barack Obama's presidency.*
In 2015, cartoonist Dan Perkins was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Editorial Cartooning as Tom Tomorrow of Daily Kos.
In an October 2018 Simmons Research survey of 38 news organizations, the Daily Kos was ranked the fifth least trusted news organization by Americans in a tie with Breitbart News, with the Palmer Report, Occupy Democrats, InfoWars and The Daily Caller being lower-ranked.
In 2023, Daily Kos received a PEN Oakland/Adelle Foley Award.
References
References
- (May 28, 2006). "Can Bloggers Get Real?". [[The New York Times]] Magazine.
- Smith, Ben. (March 13, 2018). "The Founder Of Daily Kos Just Launched A Massive New Polling Project".
- (June 2004). "The Expanding Blogosphere". American Journalism Review.
- (August 4, 2020). "Sen. Lindsey Graham holds one-point lead in tight SC race for reelection, poll finds". [[USA Today]].
- (October 15, 2018). "Money no object: Donations pour in for Dem hopefuls". Orlando Sentinel.
- (September 7, 2017). "Rise of the Grassroots".
- (September 5, 2007). "Kos is media, federal ruling determines". [[Politico]].
- (July 26, 2004). "THE EYES OF THE NATION: THE INTERNET; Year of the Blog? Web Diarists Are Now Official Members of Convention Press Corps". [[The New York Times]].
- "Dailykos.com Traffic and Demographic Statistics by Quantcast". Quantcast.
- (April 13, 2017). "Daily Kos Is Back".
- (January 21, 2022). "Arizona Democrats Have Turned On Kyrsten Sinema - Just 8 percent of her party's voters view the senator favorably. What could she be thinking?". [[Slate (magazine).
- (July 22, 2018). "Texas GOP claims recent poll shows Cruz leading O'Rourke by only 2 point". San Antonio Express-News.
- (September 25, 2018). "Online poll of Kansas governor's race puts Laura Kelly slightly ahead of Kris Kobach". Topeka Capital-Journal.
- (March 22, 2021). "Seeing through a new Prism". Columbia Journalism Review.
- (October 20, 2020). "Prism, a news site led by women of color, centers the voices of marginalized people in its reporting". Neiman Journalism Lab.
- (July 7, 2020). "Kos Media, LLC - Coronavirus Bailouts - ProPublica". ProPublica.
- James Bikales. (July 6, 2020). "Here are the major media companies that received coronavirus relief loans". [[The Hill (newspaper).
- "Research 2000: Problems in plain sight".
- (June 29, 2010). "It's war! Lawyer for DailyKos details lawsuit against Research 2000". [[The Washington Post]].
- "Kos Media LLC et al v. Research 2000 et al".
- (May 27, 2011). "Daily Kos vs. Research 2000 Lawsuit Settled".
- (March 6, 2012). "Redistricting: What Happens Next?". The New York Observer.
- (November 10, 2016). "How the polls missed Trump's victory". Reuters.
- (December 27, 2012). "So Few Swing Districts, So Little Compromise". [[The New York Times]].
- (March 7, 2012). "Baby business - Data Crunch: How Democratic and Republican Are the Court's Congressional Districts?". The New York Observer.
- Bernstein, David S.. (June 21, 2006). "How to neuter the Republicans". [[The Phoenix (newspaper).
- Thompson, Doug. (July 16, 2006). "On second thought...".
- Grynbaum, Michael M.. (July 6, 2006). "Bloggers battle old-school media for political clout". [[The Boston Globe]].
- Curry, Tom. (June 16, 2006). "Warner looks left, looks right, looks toward '08". [[NBC News]].
- "C-SPAN".
- Talbot, Margaret. (2025-03-04). "Elon Musk Also Has a Problem with Wikipedia". [[The New Yorker]].
- Solomon, Deborah. (March 19, 2006). "Kos Célèbre". [[The New York Times]].
- (2019-01-23). "Mail Online demands browser warning U-turn". [[BBC News]].
- Benkler, Yochai. (October 6, 2020). "The Disinformation Age Politics, Technology, and Disruptive Communication in the United States". Cambridge University Press.
- (June 8, 2019). "Google rewards reputable reporting, not left-wing politics". [[The Economist]].
- (April 11, 2017). "Ron Estes, a Republican, Survives Tight House Race to Win Kansas Seat". [[The New York Times]].
- Balcerzak, Ashley. (April 10, 2017). "Flurry of Spending in Kansas 4th". [[OpenSecrets]].
- Nir, D. [http://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/7/28/1553614/-Daily-Kos-is-proud-to-endorse-Hillary-Clinton-our-first-woman-nominee-for-president Daily Kos] {{Webarchive. link. (November 8, 2016 July 28, 2016.)
- Bluestein, Greg. (April 5, 2017). "Nearly 200K Donors Help Jon Ossoff Net Record Fundraising Haul". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
- "Main Page from dKosopedia". Daily Kos.
- "dkosopedia.com".
- (June 24, 2024). "Sign the petition: Say NO to diverting public school money to private schools!".
- (June 24, 2024). "Sign on: support universal pre-K!".
- (April 6, 2008). "Time.com's First Annual Blog Index".
- (April 10, 2015). "Daily Kos Is Back".
- Benton, Joshua. (October 5, 2018). "Here's how much Americans trust 38 major news organizations (hint: not all that much!)".
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