Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina are some of the most closely watched primary states. And when it comes to the Facebook primary, Hillary Clinton is easily beating the entire 2016 field in all three states.
According to data provided by Facebook to msnbc, the former secretary of state is by far the most talked about 2016 candidate in the key early primary states of Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina. And following Clinton, Democratic candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders comes in second in two of the three states, surpassing all the Republicans running.
From May 13 through June 13, Facebook measured the number of unique U.S. Facebook users talking about each of the candidates on the social networking site, as well as the number of interactions generated in relation to each candidate (interactions are defined as likes, comments, and shares on content related to the candidate).
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During this period, Clinton was the most buzzed-about candidate by a wide margin in all three of the key primary states for which Facebook provided data. Following Clinton, Sanders came in second in Iowa and New Hampshire, beating out every Republican in the crowded 2016 field.
In South Carolina, Republican Sen. Rand Paul came in second behind Clinton, with over 132,000 interactions. Clinton had nearly three times as many, with 460,000 interactions. Paul was also the leading Republican after Clinton and Sanders in both Iowa and New Hampshire.
The pool of candidates in this race is very large at this early stage, but most of the other candidates finished far behind Clinton, Sanders, and Paul, when it came to Facebook buzz. Republicans such as Ben Carson, Sen. Lindsey Graham, Sen. Ted Cruz, Jeb Bush, Mike Huckabee, Rick Perry, Sen. Marco Rubio, Rick Santorum, Carly Fiorina, Donald Trump, and George Pataki all were far behind in both unique users talking about them and number of interactions generated. On the Democratic side, former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley was also far behind the leaders.









