On Sunday night, the Senate convened a rare Sunday session to debate key provisions of the Patriot Act that were set to expire — and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul, a vocal opponent of the NSA’s bulk data collection program, blanketed social media platforms in a strategic effort to rally his supporters to the cause.
Tweet us pictures throughout the night with yourself watching the Senate in the medium of your choice . Use #standwithrand.
— Dr. Rand Paul (@RandPaul) May 31, 2015
As Senate debate over the legislation began Sunday, Paul took to Twitter and asked supporters to tweet pictures of themselves watching the proceedings and to using the hashtag #StandWithRand. The Republican presidential candidate received a flood of responses and retweeted dozens of individuals who sent him selfies of them watching the Senate debate on television. The hashtag quickly began trending, garnering more than 19,000 mentions on Sunday.
Paul’s account, managed by his staff while he was on the Senate floor, retweeted more than 50 supporters who shared photos of themselves watching the Patriot Act debate on TV. They tacked on #StandWithRand and some even created riffs on that branding with #BabiesForRand, #LibertyOnTheRocks, and #endNSAspying, for instance.
Paul’s campaign was notable in its high level of one-on-one engagement with supporters, something that is rarely seen in high-profile politicians’ social media accounts. Typically, every post from a political social media account is tightly vetted; Mitt Romney’s 2012 presidential campaign famously required 22 people to approve each tweet from @MittRomney before it could be published.
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