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Twitter Use By Romney and Obama In 2012 Highlight the Speed of Social Media

HughPickens.com writes On 30 August 2012, Hollywood star Clint Eastwood took the stage to lambast President Obama. What ensued was an odd, 11-minute monologue where Eastwood conversed with an empty chair upon which an imaginary Barack Obama sat. The evening of Eastwood's speech the official campaign Twitter account @MittRomney did not mention the actor, while the Obama campaign deftly tweeted out from @BarackObama a picture of the president sitting in his chair with the words "This Seat's Taken". The picture was retweeted 59,663 times, favorited 23,887 times, and, as importantly, was featured in news articles across the country. According to Daniel Kress both campaigns sought to influence journalists in direct and indirect ways, and planned their strategic communication efforts around political events such as debates well in advance. Despite these similarities, staffers say that Obama's campaign had much greater ability to respond in real time to unfolding commentary around political events (PDF) given an organizational structure that provided digital staffers with a high degree of autonomy.

Romney's social media team did well when it practiced its strategy carefully before big events like the debates. But Obama's social media team was often quicker to respond to things and more creative. According to Kress, at extraordinary moments campaigns can exercise what Isaac Reed calls "performative power," influence over other actors' definitions of the situation and their consequent actions through well-timed, resonant, and rhetorically effective communicative action and interaction. During the Romney campaign as many as 22 staffers screened posts for Romney's social media accounts before they could go out. As Romney's digital director Zac Moffatt told Kreiss, the campaign had "the best tweets ever written by 17 people. ... It was the best they all could agree on every single time."

2 of 47 comments (clear)

  1. IRS by Kunedog · · Score: 0, Troll

    He was adept at using the IRS too.

  2. Re:What keeps me from liking Romney by Opportunist · · Score: 1, Troll

    Any religion is.

    Tell me: Why is it that when one person says he's having this imaginary friend that even he can't see but that tells him what to do and what not to do, and that he is supposed to make everyone around him play by the rules of his buddy, that we recommend him to see a shrink, if we not send him to a mental institution outright if he continues to pester people about it.

    But when a few millions do it we call it religion and they not only get governmental protection to get on everyone's nerves, they also get their imaginary buddy's whims enshrined in laws.

    It boggles the mind, it really does.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.