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The 2016 US presidential election and media on Instagram: Who was in . . . The present study is an effort to analyze the timing of media postings related to candidates Clinton and Trump on Instagram before and after the 2016 US presidential election Hashtags are used to determine whether a posting was intended to support or oppose either candidate
Instagramming Issues: Agenda Setting During the 2016 Presidential . . . During the 2016 US presidential election primaries, Instagram users were mostly young adults (59% being 18–29 years old in the United States), more often women (38% vs 26%), completed some college (37%), and made less than $30,000 a year (38%) (Greenwood et al , 2016)
The Social Media Election of 2016 - Springer Social media radically upended the traditional campaign norms and practices in the 2016 presidential campaign Its use was unprecedented in volume, scope, and tactics The Trump campaign was transformative in relying on social media as the primary communication
Identity politics, social media and the 2016 presidential election This capstone project explored the impact social media had on the presidential election of 2016 As social media became integrated more into American culture, presidential candidates took advantage of the ability to connect to their constituents on a personal level
How Social Media drove the 2016 US Presidential Election: fake news on Clinton’s emails, shared on her Facebo damaged her election chances This fake news impact was most pronounced for seniors, ics and high earners – demographics who moved towards Trump in the before the election The authors draw lessons from the past election to advise where, when and how to drive the political conversation
FINDING GENDER IN ELECTION 2016: LESSONS FROM PRESIDENTIAL . . . - CAWP In April 2015, the Barbara Lee Family Foundation (BLFF) and the Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP) launched Presidential Gender Watch 2016, a project to track, analyze, and illuminate gender dynamics in the 2016 presidential election