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Presidential campaigns take to the Internet
May 7, 1999
Web posted at: 12:45 p.m. EDT (1645 GMT)
WASHINGTON (CNN, May 7) -- Estimates show there to be 54 million Internet users in mid-1998, 62 million now, and one million new users logging on every month. It's an audience no information-age candidate can afford to ignore.
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Some images from presidential campaign Web sites. Click on the image to go to the site.
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Like never before, political candidates are pouring money into increasingly sophisticated Web sites. According to Federal Election Commission records and interviews with the campaigns, Web sites are high up on the candidates' spending lists.
Dan Quayle's committee shelled out $26,000 to get his site up and running -- one of the biggest checks he wrote. Pat Buchanan has a webmaster on his payroll earning $50,000 a year. Lamar Alexander is spending $20,000 on his site just for starters.
You get the picture.
Web sites are by no means the biggest ticket items. George W. Bush paid his top consultant, Karl Rove, $220,000 in the first quarter. Steve Forbes spent $200,000 on video production. And direct mail costs are already running into the hundreds of thousands.
But Web sites have evolved from mere curiosities in 1996 to indispensable campaign tools in 2000. And if they live up to the hype, the amount candidates spend on their sites could grow as fast as the Internet itself.
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Friday, May 7, 1999
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