Birds of a feather?

Following Tweetminster's analysis of the state of play in ‘
Twitter and UK Politics',
Iain Dale updated his list of
top
20 political twitterers from each the two main parties. Dale is annoyed
that the Labour twitterati have jumped on the Tweetminster comment about
Twitter being the tool of the ‘Tory machine' and ‘Labour's grassroots
activists'. He raises a good question that neither he nor the Tweetminster
paper answers, ‘how representative of the party are the comments posted on
Twitter?' In reality, the answer exists in a continuum between
@Conservaties and
@DanHannanMEP populated by
@ericpickles,
@grantshapps,
@mayoroflondon and
@torybear!
A purely quantitative ‘follower' count is interesting but
inherently problematic. Not least, we know that Twitter is notorious for
‘follower spam' and it is difficult to assess the quality of listening or level
of engagement (if any) - which is what matters. Tweetminster has the advantage
of having lots of data and so can take a much more nuanced and robust view of
Twitter usage. They focus on reach by analysing not only followers but more
importantly the number of times an account has been retweeted (forwarded by
another Twitter user) or mentioned in a third-party Tweet. Where this analysis
falls short is looking at the nature of mentions and retweets; positive or
negative!
Dale puts Sarah Brown at the top of Labour Twitterers. But
her tweets aren't political, certainly not party-political. Indeed, it's likely
that her popularity is exactly because she is not seen as a politician
(Tweetminster include her too). She might be associated with the Labour Party
but clearly is not pushing a party message, policy agenda or anti-Tory
rhetoric. Kerry McCarthy on the other hand clearly does all of the above and ranks
9th in Dale's list of followers. McCarthy, Labour's ‘Twitter Tsar', is
first by a huge margin in terms of most mentioned and retweeted MP (but
McCarthy has also suffered from negative Twitter campaigns, so again it is
difficult to suggest value from this).
In Tweetminster's Top 10 mentions for MPs are two Liberal
Democrats and one Conservative (Nadine Dorries, who ranks 15th in
Dale's list). For re-tweets, Eric
Pickles makes the top 10 and only Nick Clegg (2nd) remains for the
Liberal Democrats. In both lists all other places are taken by Labour MPs.
Previous
Hansard Society research on Twitter shows that Labour MPs were taking to
Twitter in much greater numbers than Conservatives in Westminster but this
levels out for PPCs. Tweetminster data shows about 75% more tweets from PPCs
than MPs in the last year but both remain dwarfed by tweets emanating from news
sources, journalists and political bloggers. It also shows that
Labour-supporting Tweeters have considerably more followers than other parties.
Tweetminster's findings echo our own in terms of Conservative PPCs being more
effective users of Twitter than their MP counterparts. Louise Bagshawe and René
Kinzett (PPCs for Corby and East Northants and
Swansea West respectively) rank second and third for mentions, although
Labour's Paul Smith comes first. Outside the top three, Esther Rantzen's
decision to stand as an independent candidate makes her the 6th most
mentioned PPC and Ian Parker-Joseph, standing for the Libertarian Party ranks 9th.
Again, the other places are filled with Labour candidates.
And let's not forget, the public has yet to engage with Twitter,
fewer still use it as a tool for following politics. Preliminary data from our
soon to be published Audit of Political Engagement 7 suggests that only 2% of
the public surveyed use Twitter to follow a political group or politician
(twice as many use Facebook). Most of those using social media do so to keep in
contact with friends and family or follow celebrities. Worse still, feedback
from Hansard Society focus groups suggests that the public are sceptical of
politicians using social media; that they are doing this ‘to look cool' or ‘to
curry favour' and because ‘some adviser that has told them to do it'.
So what influence can Twitter have beyond the Westminster bubble? To
what degree can it shape political debate in election year? In terms of
followers, Downing Street has 1.7 million and Sarah Brown has 1.1 Million but,
by contrast, the top UK
elected politician by far is Boris Johnson with 64,000 followers and the top MP
is John Prescott, who has 14,000 followers. Further afield Barack Obama has 3.2
million followers and Britney Spears 4.2 million - almost one thousand times more
than Kerry McCarthy!
This isn't to write off Twitter as an important tool simply
to contextualise reach of political twitterers as narrow and their ability to
influence at this stage limited to political activists, insiders and the media.
Kerry McCarthy is clearly the politician with the greatest digital reach, but
that's largely because of her role within the Labour Party and her influence
beyond these circles is perhaps limited. And, as McCarthy knows only too well, not
all coverage on Twitter is positive, so measuring retweets and mentions only
goes part of the way to determining influence. Influence in fact would appear
to be determined by two things. Primarily it's about an established real-world
profile (either within or outside established party structures) and, second, an
ability to say something controversial (preferably at odds with or which could
embarrass the party). Examples in the former category include @nick_clegg and @johnprescott and in the latter, @danhannanmep. For this election at
least, it's all about creating a profile amongst the media commentators who
follow Twitter and it is through this filter bed of mainstream media that twittering
has its ultimate but limited potential to influence the election. Twitter's
value is going to be as a conduit to the mainstream media or as a foil for the
story itself - launching an otherwise uninteresting policy in Twitter can make
it news!
Andy Williamson