“We should insist on the use of new technologies during elections in order to boost turnout. It is also time to open a debate on European political parties”: with his over 1100 Facebook friends and his 69 years, the president of the European Parliament has been already defined ‘the Facebook president’. His inagural speech inspired me to have a look at the online presence of other Parliaments around Europe.
Being difficult to ‘touch the reader’, as Kriistina righlty wrote, we often struggle between the feeling that ‘we are the best’, ‘WE are social media’ and – depending on the day – ‘we are out-of-date’, or ‘our website is slow, is static, is old…’ .
But what are the others doing? Where do they stand? Far from respecting any website analysis criteria, I here only try to sum up the elements that caught my attention on the different webistes I’ve surfed.
My choice of parliaments is completely arbitrary, and I apologise with the collegues that feel underrepresented. Don’t worry: we can write a series of this (and then put them in a Focus of course!). I took in consideration: UK Parliament, Spanish Congreso, Italian Camera and, with the help of Christian and Leszek, German Bundestag and Polish Sejm.
UK Parliament: interactive and connected!
UK Parliament’s page open with a pop-up survey, asking to answer few questions on the quality of the website…WOW!! They even thank you for taking part in it.
Immediately, the feeling is of involvment and interactivity. All the navigation is user-driven. Any section has many layers from which you can choose: basically you create you own home-page according to your interests.
No much text, but factual and accesible information available immediately, for example on meetings, reports and special events.
Scrolling down the page a little, the ‘Get involved’ part of the site becomes central: a direct link to Facebook (double-WOW!) , and then audio and video archive. But that’s not all. Opening the ‘Join in!’ page, you can access Twitter, Flickr, Youtube, FriendFeed (a sharing tool open to comments) and ‘Parliament Labs’ the blog of the Web centre of the UK Parliament (Steve, is it your source of inspiration?).
Finally, you can access online forums where people debate Parliament-related topics. But collegues, don’t worry: I couldn’t find any topic with more than 50 comments! What I also find good is the ‘bookmark’ tool, that allows to share the information on the most popular social networks.
Another important part of the homepage is dedicated to visits and school tools to learn about the Parliament: a website really user-oriented and participative, that should inspire many others!
Spanish Congreso: so transparent and…so international!
Impossible for me to enter the Congreso website in Spanish. The default version is English. Fortunately, only the titles. When you go to the body of the text, only the Spanish version is available.
Languages a part, transparency seems to be the main concern for Spanish legislators, as acts and bills occupy most of the space on ‘La Une’. But multimedia also plays a role: a nice photo gallery of the building, and link to three different channels of the Congreso web TV.
As a confirmation that transparency matters to Spanish congress, the very effective seach engines: if you look in ‘Publicaciones’ or ‘Iniciativias’ or ‘speeches’, you can search by a key word and a very comprehensive and understandable list of documents appear, with hiperlinks allowing to relate one document to the other.
On the main page, also, contacts for visits and email addresses: an attention to citizens that is never unwelcome.
‘Camera dei deputati’: Youtube and the link…with the past
The remarkable element of Italian Camera’s website is the portal containing an historical archive that collects audio and videos from 1919 till nowadays. Amazing: for example, watch the ‘Camera fascista’ voting for the foundation of the fascist ‘Empire’! Scary and…hilarious.
There is also a photo album showing the magnificent artistic properties of the House. Feeling like visiting it? Easy. Just send a fax to the security…:)
But please don’t think that Italians only look back to the past. Modernity also has its place on the homepage of ‘la Camera’, linking to its Youtube channel. Opened in November 2008, the channel contains 134 videos, many of them reporting on current activities, special events taking place at the Parliament, debates and interviews. The most viewed has 966 visits. A pity that comments and rating are forbidden.
Bundestag: multimedia and multilanguage
Germans…I’m sorry guys, but they do it better! They have a brand new website, inaugurated in August. First of all, it’s available in French and English, and not only the homepage! You can access activities, acts and general information from the main menu, with a very easy and complete navigation system.
In second place, videos, photos, webTV and multimedia in general have a prominent role on the homepage, that has an appealing graphic and ‘magazine’ style.
A very easy calendar tool on the right of the main menu links to the activities of the chamber, while the TV schedule connects you the programs of the day.
On the left, space to interactivity and games: a section dedicated to young people, another to children. Virtual visits, funny widgets and simulations to play ‘the MPs’ make the visit entrataining and useful for the non-specialist public.
Finally, if you want to follow the results of next Sunday’s elections live, be connected!
Maybe it’s the absence of any link to social media, or actually the absence of Bundestag from social media at all, that made a German blogger comment that this is a website from the 90s. I wish all the parliaments’ websites were from the 90s like this!
Polish Sejm: transparency and children at its heart
The website is entirely translated to English, a part from the actuality. Sections are clearly and simply structured, and access to document is intuitive. They even have regulation on lobbyist and list of lobbyists publicly available from the main page.
Polish Parliament bets on children to be better known: an interactive animation shows the history, the symbols and the meaning of the country as well as of its national assembly.
And us?
No, I’m sorry…the exercise didn’t aim at judging who’s better and who’s worse. So, no comparison with OUR website please! We know that we have much to learn, but also that we try and do our best to make our webiste attractive and useful.
Being imaginative, however, why not dreaming of Europarl as a mix between the connectivity of UK Parliament, the content-richness of German, the transparency of the Spanish and Polish and…the beauty of art galleries of the Italian? :)






Writing for (y)EU | Surfing (other) European parliaments http://bit.ly/2buwDH
@ Florina: “here” is where?
Here is a review of the Bundestag-Website in a renowned german webdesign blog (text and comments in german)
New post by raffaella on our team's blog "Surfing (other) European parliaments
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La camera dei deputati is beautiful. I visited a close friend last year in italy and we went to the camera dei deputai and I can realy say that the italian parliament is full of art and history. Great visit.
all the best