Political Twitter Fun

Did you know there's such a thing as TwitterAudit? I didn't either. You enter "any Twitter screen name," and it estimates "How many of your Twitter followers are real?" I just found out that none of the Democratic presidential candidates follow @potus on Twitter, and that TwitterAudit {"not affiliated with Twitter in any way") considers 57% of Chris Christie's Twitter followers fake, which makes plenty of sense to me. There's also a Twitter Primary, from Spokeo, and Trump is routing all other GOP contenders. Everybody loves a good train wreck.

If the primary was held on twitter, the contest would be between Hillary Clinton (3.81 million followers) and Donald Trump (3.11 million followers). The contest might be even closer, using twitteraudit.com-- we find that a full 35% of Hillary’s followers are fake followers (based on Twitter Audit’s metrics-- number of tweets, date of last tweet, ratio of followers to friends-- but this may be a holdover from the last campaign and previous followers).  On the Republican side, Chris Christie fares even worse, with 57% of his followers being fake. Bernie Sanders has racked up an impressive social media following-- especially connecting with young people. Aside from Trump, Marco Rubio and Rand Paul have also amassed followings that stand out over the rest of the pack. Checking who the candidate chooses to follow can give us a little insight into who specific candidates are interested in. Some are calculated, some are genuine, but all provide a window into the candidate’s world. Let’s take a look at some social media lessons you can take from your candidates. Lesson 1: Keep it a family affair-- stick to the familiar. Manage your presence carefully. Follow people and causes you know. For example, Lincoln Chafee is very committed to his home state of Rhode Island. Donald Trump follows his family, resorts, and co-stars from the Celebrity Apprentice. Lincoln ChafeeFollowing: 497 Notable Follows: Rhode Island Interfaith Co., Rhode Island LGBTQ Center, Rhody Ready, RI Resource Recovery, Pawtucket Times, Serve Rhode Island, EPA New England, RI Humanities, Rhode Island Monthly, Buy Local RI Hillary ClintonFollowing: 38 Notable Follows: Too Small to Fail, Women Public Service, Bill Clinton, Chelsea Clinton, Clinton Global Initiative Carly FiorinaFollowing: 685 Notable Follows: Thomas Friedman, Orange County Water, Grange Restaurant, Los Angeles Lakers Mike HuckabeeFollowing: 494 Notable Follows: Megyn Kelly, Brian Kilmeade, Bret Baier, Bill O’Riley, Greta Van Sustren, Fox News Sunday Donald TrumpFollowing: 46 Notable Follows: Leeza Gibbons, Geraldo Rivera, Shawn Johnson, Steven Tyler, Vince McMahon, Earvin Magic Johnson, Piers Morgan Lesson 2: Don’t leave it to the intern or outsource your social media labor. If you don’t deem the brand important, a third party won’t either. They may load up on followers for convenience, and you’ll end up with a wild west in your follows. Worse yet, some of the follows might be just flat out offensive and unpresidential. You can’t choose who wants to follow you-- but you can choose who you follow. Bobby JindalFollowing: 20.9k Notable Follows: celebrity pizza, charity water, sports insomniac, cash advice, fuhrer here, deception in Islam, american car signs.com Marco RubioFollowing: 2777 Notable Follows: Miami Dolphins, TMZ, autonation, quitsmoking123, bitchaboutobama.com, best web designs. Lesson 3: Surprise people-- in a good way. Show people aspects of your personality that we didn’t expect. Rand Paul is a good example here; while you might expect a GOP candidate to follow a lot of FOX news, between following MTV News and Historically Black Colleges and Universities, you can see the Senator’s diversity. Rand PaulFollowing: 379 Notable Follows: MTV News, National Urban League, HBCU Buzz, James Woods, John Cusack, Grover Norquist Bernie SandersFollowing: 973Notable Follows: Lewis Black, Dave Navarro, Justin Long, Larry Willmore Rick SantorumFollowing: 1255 Notable Follows: Rick’s Sweater Vest, Amber Montana, The Duggar Family, Susan Boyle, Samantha Barks Lindsay GrahamFollowing: 2245 Notable Follows: The View, Ben Affleck, Duck Dynasty, Matt Lewis, US Army Central George PatakiFollowing: 358 Notable Follows: eharmony, smuttynose brewing, Kathie Lee Gifford, Blanchard Gold Lesson 4: Check your followers! If you’re running for president, clean up your social media accounts! Martin O’Malley has the unfortunate distinction of following both Stephen Collins AND Ray Rice. Rick Perry gets the biggest “OOOPs” moment for following @iwantcamgirls. Rick PerryFollowing: 29.4k Notable Follows: Tim Tebow, iwantcamgirls, deardrunkme, the Chive, Jesse James, “Doc” Emmett L Brown, Arnie Vinick, Make a Wish CSTX, Kevin Sorbo, Utah spine and disk Martin O’MalleyFollowing: 1,945 Notable Follows: Kevin Spacey, House of Cards, Edward Norton, Conan O’Brien, Rachel Ray. Stephen Collins, Ray Rice. Lesson 5: Be relatable. Unlike most of us, politicians are desperately trying to seem more human. Fortunately, social media is a great way to show that you’re “in touch with the common man,” that you’re just “one of the guys,” yup… just a middle-class, blue-collar, suburban, regular ol’ Joe… just like everybody else… Jeb BushFollowing: 168 Notable Follows: Pitbull, Chad Ochocinco, Melinda Gates, Pope Francis, Jimmy Fallon Ted CruzFollowing: 13.9k Notable Follows: Randy Rogers Band, Mark Cuban, Rob Lowe, Homeslice Pizza, Jimmy Kimmel, All Zombie News, Houston Astros Lesson 6: Be yourself. You can’t be anyone, but yourself. For example, Jim Webb follows very few big outlets, mostly lots of regular people. That might result in a lot of egg profiles, but eggs are twitter people too. Jim WebbFollowing: 5789 Notable Follows: University of Nebraska at Omaha, seafoodnews.com, Boomer the book cat Ben CarsonFollowing: 44 Notable Follows: Evander Holyfield, Tony Dungy, Stacey Dash, friendofyourmoms Chris ChristieFollowing: 153 Notable Follows: Bon Jovi, New York Mets, New York Jets, NBA New York Knicks, FEMA, Vine, The Music Man, LeBron James, Bruno Mars, Mike Trout

The Spokeo "primary report" concludes:

While a wayward social media gaffe won’t make or break your campaign, if you’re ever planning on running for president some day, do your due diligence. Search yourself and your followers before you reach out and connect with the public.