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Facebook and Twitter played very different roles in 2016 election

Whether Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton wins the presidential election, Trump was the winner when it came to using social media.

According to a report last week from EzyInsights, “Trump’s campaign has utterly trounced Hillary Clinton’s” at utilizing Facebook, and specifically live video on Facebook. Trump used Facebook and Twitter more than Clinton did. But he used the two platforms in different ways—and so did the electorate.

Trump vs. Clinton: native video engagement on Facebook
Trump vs. Clinton: native video engagement on Facebook

Trump vs. Clinton on Facebook and Twitter

At some points in October, Trump saw roughly three times as much Facebook engagement as Clinton, according to the EzyInsights report. He also killed Clinton on both types of Facebook video: native (a pre-shot video that will play directly on Facebook) and live. He has 12 million Facebook fans to her 8 million. And he utilized Facebook more often than Clinton.

Trump vs. Clinton: live video engagement on Facebook
Trump vs. Clinton: live video engagement on Facebook

Yet even with his campaign’s strategic use of Facebook video, it was Twitter where Trump truly waged his campaign. Twitter was where Trump announced his running mate, Mike Pence, and where he ranted at 3 in the morning about former Miss Universe Alicia Machado.

Trump joined Twitter four years before Clinton, he has tweeted more than three times as much she has, and he has 13 million followers to her 10 million. Trump writes about half of his tweets himself (as an August study by a Stack Overflow data scientist found) whereas Clinton personally wrote just 59 of her tweets in 2016. Trump used Facebook for videos from rallies, but Twitter for practically everything else—statements, retorts, and rejoinders on negative stories; unprompted comments on pop culture issues; and many, many retweets.

Facebook and Twitter also served different roles for the voters. And both companies experienced positive and negative attention as a result of how they were used during the election.

Facebook spurred voter registration

On Sept. 23, Facebook made a good case for its influence when it devoted its top banner to voter registration, encouraging users to register online. A subsequent report from the Center for Election Information & Research credited Facebook with a major positive impact. Multiple secretaries of state echoed the kudos, such as California’s Alex Padilla, who told The New York Times that Facebook “clearly moved the needle in a significant way.”

But the site also came under fire during the campaign cycle for hosting fake news stories, a problem that got worse in August after it fired the whole team of people responsible for curating the stories that appear in Trending Topics.

The election forced Facebook to very publicly grapple with questions of who ought to control the news that appears on its platform, and how to keep that news politically neutral and fair.