On Monday night, Ted Cruz clinched a victory in the GOP Iowa caucus, while the Iowa Democratic Party declared Hillary Clinton the winner on Tuesday after lingering in a “virtual tie” with rival Bernie Sanders overnight.
In the days leading up to caucus night, Americans discussed the first vote of the 2016 campaign across multiple social media platforms, including Facebook, Twitter, and Google. Those platforms tracked Iowa caucus conversations, collecting data on what users were talking about, what was trending, and what kind of social media feedback candidates were receiving, and released their findings before Iowa’s contests got underway.
What correlation is there, if any, between social conversation trends and who wins an election? Not a whole lot, it would seem. Conversation trends on Facebook, Twitter, and Google all differed, and each platform had different leaders at the front of the pack.
Twitter conversation data from January 24 through January 31 showed that Hillary Clinton had a 51.6 percent share of the conversation in Iowa, while Sanders had a 42.9 percent share of the conversation. On the GOP side, Ted Cruz had a 31 percent share of conversation, followed by 30 percent for Trump and 14 Percent for Rubio.
According to Facebook, Sanders dominated pre-caucus discussion. Their data indicated that Sanders was the most talked-about of all candidates among Iowans on Facebook, capturing 42 percent of candidate conversation in Iowa on Monday, followed by Trump at 21.7 percent, Clinton at 13.1 percent, and Cruz at 10.7 percent. And when the conversation was filtered to just Iowa Democrats, 73 percent of conversation was about Sanders while just 25 percent was about Clinton.









