With selfies and listicles, U.S.
politicians go vote-hunting on social media
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[October 30, 2014]
By Alina Selyukh
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - From viral videos
to selfies, listicles and "throwback Thursday" photos, candidates in the
Nov. 4 midterm elections are leaving no social media stone unturned.
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Where a 2010 gubernatorial or congressional campaign could proudly
claim an active presence on Twitter as something almost
fashion-forward, in 2014 a multifaceted digital strategy is seen as
a prerequisite, even if little research exists to show how much
online politicking translates into votes.
Virtually all candidates are on Twitter and Facebook. Some have
Instagram accounts brimming with snapshots from the trail. Most
raise money by email and many buy online ads.
At a fraction of the cost of traditional direct mail, phone calls
and television advertising, online campaigning is already becoming a
crowded field.
So politicians and their backers try to stand out.
Before campaigning for the 2014 elections started in earnest,
supporters of Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell filmed a
then-trendy "Harlem Shake" video. In it, a McConnell-masked man
dances alone and then is suddenly surrounded by thrashing costumed
volunteers, some dressed as President Abraham Lincoln, Rosie the
Riveter and a Republican-symbol elephant.
College Republicans filmed a spoof of TV reality show "Say Yes to
the Dress" in which a woman chooses a wedding dress and a Republican
governor, despite her mother's assertions that a less appealing
dress, and a Democrat, are better.
Mark Pryor, an Arkansas Democrat fighting to keep his Senate seat,
snapped a "selfie" with former President Bill Clinton.
Charlie Baker, Republican candidate for governor of Massachussets,
posted a "throwback" photo of himself at a 1979 Aerosmith concert,
contributing to the popular social networking meme of posting old
photos on Thursdays.
Iowa's Democratic Representative and Senate candidate Bruce Braley
and Colorado's Democratic Senator Mark Udall joined other lawmakers
posing for Instagram photos of themselves to endorse the "NOH8" ("no
hate") campaign in support of same-sex marriage.
Alaska Democrat Mark Begich and the conservative group Americans For
Prosperity produced dueling listicles, online articles structured as
illustrated lists, on Buzzfeed: "8 Times Mark Begich Gave the EPA
The 'Green' Light" and "The Koch Brothers and Alaska."
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Iowa Republican Senate hopeful Joni Ernst took YouTube by storm with
perhaps the most memorable video of the cycle, an ad where she
announces she "grew up castrating hogs on an Iowa farm" and would
apply pork-cutting to Washington's spending to "make 'em squeal."
Will Ritter, co-founder of Republican political ad firm Poolhouse
Digital, said what stood out to him in this cycle was that web
videos ceased being just a side-show for TV ads.
"Instead of fighting for the hour and a half or two hours that
(people) have at home to watch TV, why not pay attention to the time
spent at work surfing the web or during the lunch break?" said
Ritter.
One academic study found that 340,000 extra votes in the 2010
midterm elections were generated by a Facebook feature that reminded
people to vote on Election Day and showed users photos of their
friends who said they already voted. Facebook will bring back the
feature this year in more than 10 languages.
But it remains unclear to what extent politicians' own social media
antics translate into votes on Election Day.
"It's not an exact science," said Ritter.
(Reporting by Alina Selyukh; Editing by John Whitesides and Frances
Kerry)
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