Throughout the first Republican presidential primary debate, candidates on both sides of the aisle took to social media to promote their campaigns and take shots at their opponents. Now that the dust has settled, who won the social media battle for attention and clicks?
Well, that depends on how you look at it. Numerous different metrics can be used to measure social media success — and depending on which metrics you look at, the social media winner of debate night is either Donald Trump, neurosurgeon Dr. Ben Carson, or Democrat Bernie Sanders.
Most-mentioned #GOPDebate candidates on Twitter:
1. @realDonaldTrump
2. @RealBenCarson
3. @RandPaul
4. @GovMikeHuckabee
5. @JohnKasich
— Twitter Government (@gov) August 7, 2015
In terms of sheer volume of mentions on social networks, Donald Trump reigned supreme. A Twitter spokesperson reported that of all the conversation about the debate on Twitter on Thursday night, Trump mentions constituted 30.38%. In other words, Trump was name-checked more than any other candidate on Twitter on Thursday night.
Facebook reported similar trends as well; a spokesperson for the social media site confirmed that Trump was also the most talked-about candidate on their platform during the debate.
However, according to an analysis from social media analytics company Crowdtangle, Dr. Carson was the big winner of the night. Carson experienced the biggest growth on his personal social accounts of any of the candidates on debate night — he increased his Facebook fans by 12% (215,000 new Likes), increased his Twitter following by 10% (41,000 new followers), and grew his Instagram following by 37% (approximately 7,000 new followers).









