Hello all, As a candidate for re-election as chair, let me explain my views on the issues you have been discussing. My view is that NCUC has and should continue to have clear, neutral _eligibility_ criteria for membership that must be applied uniformly and fairly to all applicants. So, based on our charter NCUC membership is open to any noncommercial organization that is not excluded on conflict of interest grounds (such as membership in another GNSO constituency). It is open to religious groups and atheist groups, pro-free speech and anti-free speech groups, etc. Once we have a membership, however, the participants in this constituency must engage with each other politically to formulate policies that it can advocate in the GNSO policy making process. When those views conflict, the one that reflects the preponderance of opinion should prevail. NCUC cannot and should not be "neutral" on the key policy issues of Internet governance. If it is, there is no point in having it. NCUC must find those issues that inspire and animate its members and take strong positions on them, and work to persuade other constituencies to agree with those positions, so that policies reflecting them can be implemented. It is possible, of course, that the civil society groups that join simply will not be able to agree. This can be handled in several ways. A. Our three GNSO Council representatives would vote differently from each other. This implies that the different positions have enough membership behind them to elect a Council representative. Obviously fragmentation of the NCUC voice and vote diminishes our effectiveness, but if it accurately reflects the breakdown of opinion so be it. Generally, the NCUC charter and procedures are set up to give elected officials a great deal of latitude, but we keep them on a short leash by requiring them to be elected annually and imposing term limits. B. Another way is simply to refrain from taking positions. This can be bad, or not so bad, depending on the nature of the issue. There are in fact many issues handled by ICANN that really don't affect our members that much. If we refrain from taking a position on that, we are simply wisely allocating our time, energy and attention. If we cannot take positions on critical issues regarding the future of ICANN, however, and on issues that have major implications for the values most civil society organizations hold, we are engaged in self-paralysis. So that outcome is to be avoided. C. A third way is to negotiate a compromise that keeps the differing parties reasonably satisfied. This is what usually happens. We have experience with all three of these options. However, NCUC has a historic role in ICANN as the only principled advocate for human rights and certain noncommercial interests of internet users that cannot be reliably voiced by business stakeholders or supply companies. It is vital that we retain that role. Milton Mueller, Professor Syracuse University School of Information Studies ------------------------------ Internet Governance Project: http://internetgovernance.org ------------------------------ The Convergence Center: http://www.digitalconvergence.org