Special “More Social Media Elections” E-dition

MONDAY, AUGUST 28, 2017
But Not Always For The Better

Social media was really driving the 2016 presidential race in ways nobody would’ve imagined, as Republican and DemocRAT Candidates alike used Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram as their weapons of choice in their battles for those offices they sought.

Campaigns have used social media during past elections. But for most of the 2016 campaigns, Social Media was being used more than traditional news outlets, paid advertising, and the campaign stump as the top venue candidates used to rally their supporters, attack their opponents — and even make news.

And those best able to harness the power of social media have shown they could use it to generate the most buzz.

Bernie Sanders’ campaign used Social Media and a #feeltheBern hashtag to generate record attendance at rallies around the country.

When Donald Trump fired off late-night Twitter tirades, it showed up in the feeds of millions of his followers.

Consultants from No More Free Advice tell us this year it’s no longer a question of if candidates should be using Social Media platforms, but these days campaign managers need to know how to use Social Media and how often.” Social Media has even doubled as a virtual debate stage, with candidates sparring in a manner inconceivable only a few election cycles ago.

Campaign aides also use their own accounts to respond to rival staffers and reporters who write news stories they disagree with.

Hurley the Historian says the continued rise of social media in presidential politics was, in many ways, a case of candidates meeting supporters where they had their conversations. A Pew survey released last year found that in 2014, 71% of online adults used Facebook, 26% used Instagram and 23% used Twitter. And the number of mature, major social media networks had grown since the 2012 Presidential Election, with platforms such as Pinterest and Snapchat growing in popularity. As Americans continue to make using Social Media a part of their routines, candidates are as well.

Maybe that’s why Political Insiders at yesterday’s meeting of the Conservative Agenda were asking Beloved Whistleblower Publisher Charles Foster Kane how much things had changed since the good old days when he was doing advance work for the Reagan campaign. “You can hardly imagine the changes in technology since the days The Gipper was first running for President,” Kane explained. “The most important thing the media advance team had to remember when Candidate Reagan landed for that big rally we’d spent a week arranging in Sioux City, Iowa was to be sure we had a pocket full of quarters to give network reporters like Bill Plante and Sam Donaldson when they dashed off the press plane to make their calls from all those pay phones we had arranged in the airport terminal lobby.” 

More News The Old Fashioned Way Later