Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Social media shift getting Congress results

- Saubhadra Chatterji letters@hindustant­imes.com

When Congress’s Madhya Pradesh chief Kamal Nath sat with party president Rahul Gandhi and senior MP and chief of the Congress’s campaign committee in Madhya Pradesh, Jyotiradit­ya Scindia, for dinner at Indore’s famous Chappan Bazar, little did he realise that it was going live on Facebook.

The dinner video — to showcase the casual and relaxed side of Rahul Gandhi — was a larger part of the Congress’s new social media strategy to attract more eyeballs on the internet. It attracted 2.2 million views. Later, when Gandhi followed up his dinner with a visit to a ice-cream parlour, it got 765,000 views.

Data from Facebook-owned social media tool called Crowdis Tangle shows how Gandhi’s Facebook page has been inching closer to the popularity of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s page, even though its number of page ‘likes’ is significan­tly lower. In the last week of October, Gandhi’s page got 697,771 interactio­ns, just 11,000 short of Modi’s 709,127 interactio­ns. Exactly one year ago, Modi’s page had over a million more interactio­ns than Gandhi’s. To be sure, the Prime Minister hasn’t started campaignin­g aggressive­ly for the coming assembly elections; his social media interactio­ns and engagement usually rise when he in campaign mode.

Even on Twitter, @rahulgandh­i is attracting a lot of interactio­ns. In November 2017, Gandhi’s monthly median retweet count surpassed that of Modi for the first time. It has consistent­ly been higher since then. In 2018, on average, the monthly median retweet count from Gandhi’s account has been almost four times compared to Modi’s account, HT’s analysis of Twitter data shows. Retweets and ‘likes’ on Twitter and interactio­ns on Facebook are not authoritat­ive measures of popularity or engagement because these also sometimes include interactio­ns orchestrat­ed through fake profiles and automated bots.

BJP IT cell chief Amit Malviya chose not to comment.

These are promising signals for the Congress that is keen to recalibrat­e its social media plan in the backdrop of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s formidable presence on digital platforms. The Prime Minister is the second most popular political leader on the micro-blogging site Twitter after US president Donald Trump. On Facebook, he has a following of 43,293,259 people as on Thursday while Gandhi has 2,056,215 followers. The new strategy entails that Gandhi’s presence will be stepped up across social media platforms even as Twitter remains the favourite medium for politician­s to reach out. “Each platform will be used for different types of communicat­ion. Twitter is being used for short, clear messages while Instagram will showcase the personal side of him more than ever...,” said one of Rahul Gandhi’s political aides.

NEWDELHI:

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 ?? PTI FILE ?? The dinner video to showcase the casual side of Congress president Rahul Gandhi was to attract more eyeballs on the internet.
PTI FILE The dinner video to showcase the casual side of Congress president Rahul Gandhi was to attract more eyeballs on the internet.

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