Presidential campaigns see the best (and worst) of social media

by Maggie Nelson, The Dartmouth Staff

01 Nov 2012

Courtesy of Mashable.comWith five days left until Election Day, social media serves as a way for candidates to do some last-minute campaigning and connecting with voters. Social media also allows voters to educate themselves and share their own political opinions. To no one’s surprise, President Barack Obama and Republican candidate Mitt Romney, as well as their running mates, Vice President Joe Biden and Paul Ryan, respectively, have very active Facebook pages and Twitters that have attracted millions of followers.

However, a certain disparity seems to exist between the two major presidential candidates, reflecting the different voter demographics of the two parties. Obama’s Facebook page has accumulated over 31 million likes, paling Romney’s 11.5 million. On Twitter, this gap widens. Obama’s campaign page has over 21 million followers, in comparison to Romney’s 1.634 million. These statistics seem to be a continuation of the legacy that Obama created as a social media giant in the 2008 election.

“The Obama campaign has definitely benefited from social media,” Marco Herndon ’16 said. “From using pictorial graphs that may show misleading statistics, because those really resonate well youth since young people aren’t particularly inclined to reading a lot of text. Romney’s campaign has not figured that out entirely.”

When it comes to the vice presidential running mates, though, Ryan seems be winning the social media battle against Biden. On Facebook, Ryan’s and Biden’s pages have 5.1 million and 500,000 likes, respectively.

Social media’s impact on the election, however, is not limited to messages put out by the candidate’s campaigns. Ordinary users are given more of a voice through status updates and tweets. However, because of the filter-lacking nature of social media, they are not always substantive.

“During the debates, people will just update about trivial things,” Matt Stanton ’15 said. “Like I’ll see ‘Nice Obama’ or ‘Romney’s an idiot.’ People’s opinions about the candidates are formulated about things that don’t really matter like how they present an issue or how articulate they sound.”

Stanton said that the number of memes that circulate regarding candidates can affect the popular perception of a candidate.

“When Mitt Romney made the women and binders comment … loads of memes sprouted up about that,” he said.

The use of this type of social media begs the question of what factors young voters really base their decisions on. A recent Thought Catalog post so petty, it verges on satirical, displays this potential shallowness that characterizes — at least in cyberspace — some young voters.

There has also been some thought-provoking advertising independent of the major parties, Stanton said.

“I’ve seen a lot of survey sites where you take a survey and they give you a candidate, most of the time from a third party, that you should vote for [based on how you felt about certain issues],” Stanton said. “It makes you think a lot about the real issues and how [some] people will just vote for whoever’s name they see the most.”




Tags: , , , , , ,

KAF to shorten hours, ditch sandwiches

The following press release was received from Allison Furbish, web media coordinator at King Arthur Flour. Starting tomorrow at 11 a.m., students can pick up Read more>>

Off-Campus Kitchen: Roast Duck Breast With Fig Sauce

I promised in my first Off-Campus Kitchen column I'd teach you how to make roast duck breast with fig sauce, and today, for my last Read more>>

Dartmouth Soundoff: Ten for Ten

Another term has come and gone, and the past ten weeks have seen dozens of album releases. Unfortunately Azealia Banks’ Broke With Expensive Taste was Read more>>

Sophomore Summer Bucket List

BEING OUTDOORSY (on land): Sophomore summer is virtually the one term guaranteed to be snow-free, so unleash the crunchiness within you and revel in your soon-to-be Read more>>

Beyond Hanover: Maceda '11 helps lead fashion startup

While interning at Bain & Company, Alex Maceda ’11 discovered M.M. LaFleur, a fashion brand for women seeking chic and affordable workwear amid the often-drab style Read more>>

Showcase highlights year's worth of filmmaking ventures

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rxksOt9185M Stories Growing Films, a filmmaking club that counts among its membership students and Upper Valley residents, has produced an impressive body of work in the Read more>>