Liblogs
Liblogs is a group of Canadian bloggers. The Liblogs membership consists of bloggers who generally support the Liberal Party of Canada. Content from member blogs is aggregated on the main Liblogs website.
Founded in 2005 by blogger and Liberal activist Jason Cherniak, Liblogs now includes more than 250 blogs, and is a registered non-profit corporation.
History
Liblogs was created around the same time as Progressive Bloggers as a reaction to The Blogging Tories. Beginning in April 2005 as simply a small list of links included on Liberal blogs, a central website was created to aggregate content from member sites. During the 2006 federal election, as many as ten new members joined each week.Liblogs was originally authored by Wayne Chu in 2005. In the fall of 2006, it was completely rewritten by Liberal blogger David Graham ahead of that year's federal Liberal leadership convention.
Corporate identity
In the spring of 2006, Cherniak realized that Liblogs was expanding beyond his initial concept of an unofficial list of Liberal bloggers. He began a fund-raising campaign in order to fund an application for non-profit corporate status. By April 2006, Liblogs was a company with the legal name of "Blogger Support Services".2006 Liberal leadership election
Liblogs took off after Paul Martin announced that he would be resigning as Liberal leader following the 2006 election. The different leadership campaigns began courting bloggers; Cherniak and Rob Edger were named as official "Stéphane Dion blog campaign co-chairs". Other Liberal bloggers, such as John Lennard and Dan Arnold did similar work for other leadership campaigns. In July 2006, the Toronto Star and The Globe and Mail both published articles on the involvement of bloggers in the leadership campaigns.As the 2006 [Liberal Party of Canada leadership election|Leadership Convention] approached, the Liberal Party chose to invite bloggers and treat them as media. Cherniak took the opportunity to launch new features to Liblogs, including a fully bilingual template, a French name of "Liblogues," a Young Liblogs list for Young Liberals and a news section.