After all, politics is the game
When Ellen Montgomery's co-workers relive the latest Chicago Bears
victory or commiserate over the hometown team's defeat, she has nothing
to add to the conversation.

Andrew Lee, left, came up with the idea for the Fantasy Congress
game and runs it online with the help of, from left, Ethan Andyshak,
Arjun Lall and Ian Hafkenschiel. |
Ms. Montgomery, 27, a grass-roots organizer, says she has "zero"
interest in sports and is even less equipped to engage in the
statistics-laden talk of fantasy sports leagues that dominates at many
water coolers in sports-crazy cities like Chicago. The hours sports fans
spend tracking their favorite players are for Ms. Montgomery devoted to
scouring the legislative agendas of members of Congress.
Now, she and fellow policy buffs have an outlet for their competitive
urges.
Fantasy Congress, a Web site created by four students at Claremont
McKenna College in Southern California, made its debut three weeks ago.
Through word of mouth and blog entries, it has attracted nearly 600
participants from states including Texas and Florida, from as far away
as Denmark and, of course, from the Beltway.
For those who have no idea how many yards Peyton Manning threw for on
Sunday but can cite every legislative amendment proposed by Senator
Richard Durbin, Democrat of Illinois, the game could be an alternative
to the prevailing fantasy sports culture.
Congress is in recess, and many Fantasy Congress leagues are still
recruiting players or are waiting until after the Nov. 7 elections to
get started. It remains to be seen how the game will play out over a
long legislative session. But policy enthusiasts like Ms. Montgomery say
they are thrilled that there is finally something for them.
"Especially this time of year, all you hear is people talking about
fantasy football leagues," Ms. Montgomery said. "I couldn't care less if
I tried, either about real football or fantasy football. But hey, I
actually pay attention to what goes on in Congress."
Just as in fantasy football or baseball, each player picks a team -
in this case, 4 senators and 12 House members of varying seniority
levels - and competes with other players in a league typically managed
by a friend or a co-worker. Members determine whether to play for money
or the thrill of victory. But that is where the similarities end.
www.fantasy
On the Fantasy Congress Web site, www.fantasycongress.us, leagues
have names like "We the Peeps" and "Foley4Prez," in addition to the
usual school and workplace affiliations.
Players accumulate points as the legislators they have chosen go
about their business on Capitol Hill. A House member or senator earns
five points for introducing a bill or an amendment, and more points for
negotiating successfully each step in the legislative process.
Players can change their team members once a week, so if a
scandal-plagued lawmaker resigns there is an opportunity to pick someone
new. As of now, legislators can be on multiple teams within a league,
but the site's creators plan to introduce an exclusivity rule that would
limit a legislator to playing for only one team.
A list updated daily on the Web site shows the cumulative point
rankings of each legislator. Representative Don Young, Republican of
Alaska and chairman of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee,
is first in the House with 1,905 points. Senator John W. Warner
Republican of Virginia and chairman of the Armed Services Committee,
leads the Senate with 1,991 points.
"There's so much more that impacts how a member of Congress can push
their agenda forward than just one simple metric," said Jeremy Cogan,
press secretary for Representative Grace F. Napolitano, Democrat of
California, offering an explanation for why his boss was tied for last
in the House rankings with Representative Ike Skelton, Democrat of
Missouri.
The Web site's creators say they plan to add other ways to earn
points, like floor speeches and news media references, but for now, the
bill-based system is the sole measure of legislative productivity,
making for a range of team-picking strategies.
Ms. Montgomery selected her team based on a combination of hard
calculation - politicians running for re-election are less likely to be
active on the legislative front, she reasoned - and sentimentality.
Representative Rodney Frelinghuysen, a Republican from the New Jersey
district where she grew up, has netted her zero points so far.
She is in first place in her league, while a friend who could not
bring himself to pick any Republicans - even though the majority party
has an edge in this scoring system - is in last place.
International relations
"It's about majority and seniority," said John J. Pitney Jr., a
professor of government at Claremont McKenna. "You look at who's been
very active, whose issues are coming up. Sometimes it's appropriations,
sometimes defense or international relations." Professor Pitney was an
adviser to the creators of Fantasy Congress and plans to start a team.
Andrew Lee, the senior who came up with the idea for the game and
then enlisted the help of three technically skilled classmates, has a
wonky side, to be sure. Mr. Lee has been a devotee of water-rights
policy since childhood and at 21 has had three Washington internships.
On his four-day fall break, he flew home to Colorado to work on two
Democratic campaigns.
Mr. Lee is also a Denver Broncos fan and has dabbled in fantasy
baseball. In his dorm room, a poster of Jake Plummer, the Broncos'
quarterback, hangs across from legislators-in-action photographs from
Congressional Quarterly. One day during his freshman year, Mr. Lee was
watching CNN while his roommate exulted over the results of a fantasy
football team. He thought, Why not devise a similar game that would pit
government aficionados against one another?
He hopes that Fantasy Congress, in addition to being fun, will teach
people about their representatives and the legislative process.
Professor Pitney says he will make students in his class on Congress
play next semester.
If the ins and outs of Congressional business are unlikely to have
the hold on the imagination that E.R.A.'s and R.B.I. do, turning those
maneuverings into a game may win a few converts to the geek side.
(New York Times)
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