all politics is local? the twitter performance of local candidates in the 2013 australian federal...

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All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election Assoc. Prof. Axel Bruns ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation Queensland University of Technology [email protected] @ snurb_dot_info http://mappingonlinepublics.net/

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Paper presented at the Social Media and the Transformation of Public Space conference, Amsterdam, 18 June 2014.

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Page 1: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal ElectionAssoc. Prof. Axel Bruns

ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation

Queensland University of Technology

[email protected] – @snurb_dot_info – http://mappingonlinepublics.net/

Page 2: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

BACKGROUND

• Research projects:– ARC Discovery: New Media and Public Communication (QUT)– NRC FRISAM: Impact of Social Media on Agenda-Setting in Election

Campaigns (QUT, UiO, UiB, Uppsala, CSU LB)– ATN-DAAD: Mapping Networked Politics (QUT, LMU)

• Study design:– Comparative study of Twitter usage during Australian, Norwegian,

German (and US) election– Tracking tweets from and at Twitter accounts of MPs and candidates

before, during, and after election campaigns– Additional analysis of follower networks, national Twitterspheres, social

media / mainstream media intersections, etc.

Page 3: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

AUSTRALIAN POLITICS ON TWITTER

• Twitter in Australia:– Early adoption, ~2.8m accounts by late 2013– Significant use for political debate: #auspol, #ausvotes, political accounts

• Politics in Australia:– Three-year electoral period– Lower House MPs must win majority in local electorates– Senate voting considerably more complex; half of Senate replaced every three years– Considerable media focus on two major parties and their candidates for PM

• Timeline:– 2007: change of government (Coalition > Labor)– 2010: Labor PM Kevin Rudd replaced by Deputy PM Julia Gillard– 2010: Labor PM Gillard narrowly retains power in federal election– 2012/13: former PM Rudd challenges unpopular PM Gillard– 2013: Rudd returns as PM in June– 2013: change of government (Labor > Coalition)

Page 4: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

AUSTRALIAN POLITICIANS ON TWITTER

(data to June 2013)

Page 5: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

@TONYABBOTTMHR’S FAKE FOLLOWERS

(11/12 Aug. 2013)

Page 6: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

@MENTIONS OF LEADERS (@REPLIES + RETWEETS)

TV debates

Abbott ‘sex appeal’ comments Labor campaign

‘launch’

Page 7: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

RETWEETS OF LEADERS

Page 8: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

@MENTIONS OF LEADERS

Page 9: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

@MENTIONS OF PARTY CANDIDATES(@KRUDDMP AND @TONYABBOTTMHR REMOVED)

Page 10: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

TWEETS BY LEADERS

Page 11: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

TWEETS BY PARTY CANDIDATES

Page 12: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

TWEETS BY LOCAL CANDIDATES

Page 13: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

@MENTIONS OF LOCAL CANDIDATES

Page 14: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

TWEETS BY SYDNEY CANDIDATES

Page 15: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

@MENTIONS OF SYDNEY CANDIDATES

Page 16: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

@MENTIONS (ELECTION DAY)

Page 17: All Politics Is Local? The Twitter Performance of Local Candidates in the 2013 Australian Federal Election

SOME OBSERVATIONS

• Politician activity:– Considerable tweeting activity by local candidates, though unevenly distributed– Labor and minor parties (esp. Greens) most active – Eastern states / urban centres more active

• User attention:– Overall focus on PM candidates and other frontbenchers– Some engagement with other local candidates, at lower volume– Generally more discussion about than engagement with candidates

• Further research:– Correlations with vote margins in each seat?– Impact of politicians’ responsiveness on user engagement?