This
is a topic near and dear to my heart because I was able to get an
inside look at political social media through a congressional internship
in Washington, D.C. Because of their roles as pivotal figures,
politicians have to be extremely careful about what goes on their
platforms. According to the United States House of Representatives Social Media Wiki,
96% of members of congress use Facebook and 85% use Twitter. The
congressman I worked for sometimes Tweeted his thoughts from inside
hearings and meetings! This doesn’t leave a whole lot of time for
filtering of ideas and messages for anything that could be offensive.
This
lack of a filter can be, and has been, a public relations nightmare for
some politicians. Remember New York Rep. Anthony Weiner? His political
career was ruined after he sent some inappropriate photos to women via
Twitter.
Politicians
and constituents have more access to each other than they ever have
before. And although that can create problems for politicians, it can
also be an excellent tool for them.
During the presidential elections this past year
people broke Twitter records during the first presidential debate, were
encouraged to vote by their peers through many social media platforms,
and mentioned the elections 71.7 million on Facebook.
These
interactions create an extra level of work for political support staff.
While I was in D.C., I helped respond to literally hundreds of emails
sent to my congressman each week — we received at least ten times as
many emails as we did physical letters. Petitions were conducted via
email. Our office’s media manager was literally doing the job of two
people because in addition to the traditional work of press releases and
media engagements, he was also required to regularly post to Twitter,
Facebook and YouTube as well as monitor what others were posting to the
congressman’s profiles.
I
think that social media overall does more good for politics than harm.
Maybe it isn’t such a bad thing to be able to see what our elected
officials think and do when they aren’t being filtered. And if more
people get involved in the happenings of their country because they can
do so through their mobile device, that’s great!
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.

I think it is so awesome that you worked in Washington DC!! And I agree that social media use can make or break a career, especially a political career. I think our leaders need to be very careful about what they post on the internet.
ReplyDeleteThings like Twitter and Facebook take politices to a new level.
ReplyDeleteIt will be interesting to see if this something that is used long term or if the government decides it can be to detrimental and takes it away all together.