“State of the Union” began trending on Twitter and Facebook even before President Obama’s speech started on Tuesday evening.
One of Obama’s early applause lines–about the humble upbringing of House Speaker John Boehner–prompted the hashtags #sonofabarkeep and #barkeep. Also trending early: #madmen, a reference to the AMC period drama. “It’s time to do away with workplace policies that belong in a ‘Mad Men’ episode,” the president delcared in a push for equal pay, saying the 77 cents a woman earns on average for every dollar a similarly-qualified man earns is “wrong” and “an embarrassment.”
Three-quarters of the conversation on Facebook surrounding the president’s comments on equal pay came from women, Facebook reported.
The president’s call to “give America a raise” –the crux of his argument to increase the minimum wage–caught fire on social media, as the phrase “Give America” became a nation-wide trending topic. Democratic members also tweeted with the hashtag #RenewUI, a nod to legislation that would renew unemployment insurance, which has languished in Congress.
The line “America does not stand still, and neither will I” brought major applause on the House floor and a flurry of retweets on Twitter.
Republicans started expressing their disdain early. Texas Republican Rep. Randy Weber tweeted his disdain for the president while the guests were arriving in the chamber.
On floor of house waitin on "Kommandant-In-Chef"… the Socialistic dictator who's been feeding US a line or is it "A-Lying?"
— Randy Weber (@TXRandy14) January 29, 2014
Apparently Weber’s early arrival afforded him some time to craft a few acronyms.
SOTU = Sorry Our Time's Up. POTUS = Poor Obama Trashed U.S. We shouldn't be surprised. He promised to "fundamentally change US" Boy is he?!
— Randy Weber (@TXRandy14) January 29, 2014
Other Republicans also protested.
Obama: "I will take steps without legislation."
Your oath of office says no.
#SOTU
— Rep. Steve Stockman (@SteveWorks4You) January 29, 2014
This speech sounds like more and more and more government and govt. is the problem. – RP
— Ron Paul (@RonPaul) January 29, 2014
Doesn't Obama White House pay less to women? http://t.co/VUo8JVJjMV #hypocrisy
— Cong. Tim Huelskamp (@CongHuelskamp) January 29, 2014
During the 9:15-10:15 pm Eastern hour, the State of the Union address triggered more than 773,000 mentions of the #SOTU on Twitter, according to Topsy data. The biggest peak in Facebook posts occurred around the theme of minimum wage, followed by equal pay, climate change, Obamacare, and lastly immigration.
Army Ranger Sgt. 1st Class Cory Remsburg, a veteran wounded in Afghanistan whose heroic story drew a lengthy standing ovation, sparked more than 25,000 mentions on twitter, according to Topsy. His name was trending worldwide during the hour after the speech.
Vice President Biden may have achieved the “most meme-able moment” of the evening with a mega-watt grin that immediately went viral.
Some members of Congress got their tweets pumping before the president addressed the nation.
Senate Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, a longtime champion of equal pay and workplace policies that benefit women and mothers tweeted “couldn’t agree with the President more! Proud to hear him reaffirm what we know best: When #womensucceed, America succeeds!”
Couldn't agree with the President more! Proud to hear him reaffirm what we know best: When #womensucceed, America succeeds!









