In 2015, in a presidential election cycle where having a Facebook page and Twitter handle became the norm, rather than the unconventional, candidates struggled to stay ahead of the social media curve. With 17 initial Republican candidates and five initial Democratic candidates, many campaign social media accounts in 2015 employed rather similar, uninspired content strategies, and few candidates were truly able to differentiate themselves from the sea of other candidates in the social media sphere. Sen. Bernie Sanders stood out as a grassroots star who was beloved on social media, while former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton led the charge in terms of most innovative uses of social media to target millennial voters. And on the Republican side, Donald Trump’s social media posts often became news stories of their own, though not always in a positive light.
Sanders first became a grassroots star on Reddit, where supporters of Sanders created their own “subreddit” discussion forum that was unaffiliated with the campaign, but nonetheless dedicated to growing support for Sanders’ candidacy. The subreddit has more than 140,000 subscribers to date and has spawned individual state-level subreddits for all 50 states. The Reddit group began in 2013, long before Sanders even officially declared his campaign, and growth quickly surged with more supporters urging him to run. Sanders also was the most popular presidential candidate on Tumblr in 2015, according to data released by the microblogging site, where grassroots supporters created thousands of microblogs and memes devoted to supporting Sanders and spreading his message.
For Sanders, this social media support became an important tool to help level the playing field between him and Clinton, the more establishment candidate. In the third quarter of 2015, Sanders raised nearly as much money as Clinton, raking in $26 million while Clinton raised $28 million; Sanders’ campaign reported that his fundraising came from from 1.3 million donations from 650,000 donors, rather than a small number of megadonors.
Clinton, meanwhile, used social media to target millennial voters by pushing the envelope on new and existing platforms to capture young voters’ attention. On Facebook and Twitter, Clinton’s campaign crafted posts designed to humanize Clinton and make her relatable, poking fun at her pantsuit collection and posting selfies with pop star Katy Perry and the stars of Comedy Central’s “Broad City.”
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