Earlier this week we talked about all the cool new applications over at OpenCongress.org (which are really taking off), and today we're delighted to tell you that MAPLight.org has produced some new widgets that allow you to track fundraising for over 1,500 congressional candidates. These widgets are perfect for blogs, social networking pages, and personal Web sites, and they are completely customizable according to the candidates you are interested in.
The congressional money race widgets follow MAPLight.org's August release of presidential money race widgets that allow users to track funds raised by presidential candidates.
Sunlight's proud that MAPLight.org is one of its signature grantees.
On a related note, remember you can help our Congresspedia editors ‘Wiki the Vote' by reporting on the full record of every candidate running for Congress.
Thanks for pointing this out. I'm checking in with MAPLight re: the accuracy of the bar charts. Looks to me that they are merely "representative" and not absolutely accurate. In the meantime, stick with the numbers!
Thanks for writing. The bars are not exactly to scale, because it's not possible to show a 100-fold difference in such a small space. Instead, amounts that are very small are displayed with a small "stub" (like Scott Tripton's amount above).
The $ numbers shown are accurate and come directly from Federal Election Commission data.
Dan Newman, Executive Director, MAPLight.org
I agree that it is difficult to accurately represent widely varying numbers in a small amount of screen space (although you do have around 100 pixels of space for the bars, so accurately representing a 100-fold difference should be possible). However, the current display is misleading without some indication that the scale is not linear. Either the scale should be corrected (so that small values only receive a few pixels) or some a scale break indication should be included on the plot.
There's something pretty screwy going on with the scale - compare Scott Tription (~$8,000) with Marilyn Musgrave (~$800,000). It looks like there's a five-fold difference in the length of the bars, not a 100-fold difference!