Today is February 9th
Documenting the Political Partying Circuit
From the early hours of the morning until late in the evening, politicians are partying. Sunlight's PARTY TIME can help you find out who is partying, where and when.

PARTYFINDER™

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PartyTimeData • POSTED - 01.27.10 BY Nancy Watzman

New tools to grab Party Time data

In this election year, we’re creating new ways for you to get Party Time congressional fundraiser data on to your Web site.

API

For those with programming backgrounds, 0ur new API feed pulls Party Time data in “JSON” format. You can find the feed here: http://politicalpartytime.org/json/N00009668/. The last number represents a candidateID. You can determine a candidate ID by going to his or her profile page on Political Party Time. (IDs originate from the Center for Responsive Politics (CRP) — the nation’s authority on campaign finance data.) This is the feed that’s now powering Party Time information at CRP, which we announced yesterday.

RSS

You can find the RSS feed for Party Time here: http://politicalpartytime.org/feeds/pol/N00009668/

CSV

If you’re less programming inclined, but like to play with spreadsheets, you can download a data dump for Party Time congressional fundraisers here.

relational zip

And as a relational “zip” file here.

You can get more details in the “bulk data” section of our Web site here.

Have fun, and please drop us a line if you are using Party Time data, so we can credit you.

Much thanks to Luke Rosiak for building new Party Time tools.

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PARTYFINDER™ Hints

Beneficiary: congressional candidate, lawmaker, or entity which collects funds raised at party

Host: person who is hosting party-often, but not always, a registered federal lobbyist

Venue Name: where the party is

Entertainment Type: type of gathering, such as "breakfast," "ski trip," "bowling"

Other Lawmakers Mentioned: lawmakers mentioned on invitation who are used as a draw for the event

Sunlight's Party Time is a project to track parties for members of Congress or congressional candidates that happen all year round in Washington, D.C. and beyond. (read more)

We also post information we receive about parties where members of Congress are expected to participate—such as convention or inaugural parties.

Since we don't hear about all the parties, you can also tell us if you know where the party is and we don't.