ARIZONA NEWS

Online popularity didn’t equal automatic votes for Arizona candidates

Nov 7, 2014, 8:43 PM | Updated: 8:45 pm

WASHINGTON — If Facebook friends were votes, Fred DuVal would be the next governor of Arizona.

But DuVal, a Democrat with 30,425 fans of his social media site on Election Day, was defeated easily Tuesday by Republican Doug Ducey and his comparatively small 18,866 Facebook fans on that day.

While it’s nice to be liked as a politician, it’s better to be elected. And the results of this week’s balloting in Arizona challenge conventional wisdom and recent studies that suggest candidates with a more engaging social media presence are more likely to win elections.

“I think we need a lot more research to be conducted that’s really systematic,” said Diana Owen, an associate professor of political science in Georgetown University’s Communication, Culture, and Technology graduate program.

Social media had a big impact on President Barack Obama’s 2008 election, Owen said, but studies trying to pin down any ongoing correlation between a political campaign’s social media and its election results are “sketchy at best.”

That was borne out in Arizona’s statewide and congressional races: About half of those candidates with better social media numbers ended up winning, about half ended up losing. Counting tweets, it turns out, isn’t the same as counting votes.

Facebook uses 14 different metrics to measure engagement on a candidate’s fan page, including people who like the page, comments on a post and sharing the page’s post to their own network. It converts those into a number that lets users know how many “people are talking about” a Facebook page at any given time.

Political communications firm MacWilliams Sanders Erikson looked at Facebook’s impact on the 2012 elections, analyzing candidates’ Facebook engagement over three months.

It found that candidates with more engaged Facebook pages won eight of nine Senate races and 20 of 33 House races it looked at that year, concluding that campaigns that engage online fans “will be rewarded with a meaningful voting bump on Election Day.”

But the study did have one anomaly: Arizona.

The state’s U.S. Senate race that year was the only one where Facebook engagement did not correlate with election results in the firm’s study. It looks like the same thing happened in Arizona’s 2014 midterm elections.

Facebook’s metrics said DuVal had 8,000 people “talking about” him on Facebook on Election Day, compared to 1,200 for Ducey. But Ducey ended the day with 685,200 votes to DuVal’s 531,849, according to the latest unofficial returns from the Arizona Secretary of State’s office Friday.

Races for state school superintendent, secretary of state and attorney general followed suit. Attorney General-elect Mark Brnovich didn’t even have a Facebook fan page for his campaign, but bested Felecia Rotellini who had almost 4,000 people talking about her on Election Day.

The state’s congressional races were a little more likely to align social-media success with ballot-box success, but it wasn’t perfect.

Owen said that while social media isn’t the best source for election predictions, she does believe it has some effect on voter turnout.

“It might encourage people to turn out,” she said. People who follow candidates on social media are signing up for constant updates, which can turn in to reminders to get to the polls as Election Day gets close.

A study done by the University of California, San Diego, appears to agree with her. Professors there looked at social media networks that put out Election Day messages encouraging users to vote, and found that such messages resulted in 340,000 additional votes nationwide.

But Owen said it would be risky to assume anything more than that.

“I don’t hold much faith in the ‘number of tweets equals the winner’ theory,” she said.

We want to hear from you.

Have a story idea or tip? Pass it along to the KTAR News team here.

Arizona News

A file photo shows flight information monitors at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport...

KTAR.com

Technical problem impacts flight schedules at Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport

A technical problem impacted flight schedules at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport on Friday, official said.

2 hours ago

Barbara Davis was last seen near 16th Street and Broadway Road on April, 25, 2024. (Arizona Departm...

KTAR.com

Silver Alert activated for 84-year-old woman last seen in Phoenix

A Silver Alert was activated early Friday for an 84-year-old woman who was last seen in Phoenix the previous night, authorities said.

3 hours ago

Trunk Space moving after eight years eight years at the Grace Lutheran Church campus in Phoenix....

Bailey Leasure

Trunk Space event venue looking for new home after 8 years at current Phoenix location

The Trunk Space, a Phoenix nonprofit venue that hosts art, music and theater events, will be looking for a new home at the end of May.

4 hours ago

AZ Political Podcast: Ben Toma talks fake elector scheme...

Jim Sharpe

AZ Political Podcast: Arizona House Speaker Ben Toma talks fake elector indictment

This episode of AZ Political Podcast features Arizona House Speaker Ben Toma, who shares his thoughts on the fake elector scheme.

4 hours ago

Part of State Route 88 that closed in 2019 is getting repairs...

Serena O'Sullivan

Work underway to restore limited access to stretch of State Route 88 east of Valley

The Arizona Department of Transportation said on Thursday it kicked off initial repairs for a part of State Route 88 closed in 2019.

4 hours ago

(The Picklr photos)...

KTAR.com

Indoor pickleball chain to open 1st of 3 East Valley venues in Tempe this fall

A large Utah-based indoor pickleball franchise will open its first Valley location later this year, the company announced.

4 hours ago

Sponsored Articles

...

DESERT INSTITUTE FOR SPINE CARE

Desert Institute for Spine Care is the place for weekend warriors to fix their back pain

Spring has sprung and nothing is better than March in Arizona. The temperatures are perfect and with the beautiful weather, Arizona has become a hotbed for hikers, runners, golfers, pickleball players and all types of weekend warriors.

...

COLLINS COMFORT MASTERS

Here are 5 things Arizona residents need to know about their HVAC system

It's warming back up in the Valley, which means it's time to think about your air conditioning system's preparedness for summer.

...

Collins Comfort Masters

Avoid a potential emergency and get your home’s heating and furnace safety checked

With the weather getting colder throughout the Valley, the best time to make sure your heating is all up to date is now. 

Online popularity didn’t equal automatic votes for Arizona candidates