Kuwait Times

Trump, Biden turn to a new campaign field - Snapchat

Photo-sending app, a new battlefiel­d for opponents

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WASHINGTON: Gone are the lively meetings, the distributi­on of flyers on busy campuses. The coronaviru­s pandemic has put an abrupt stop to traditiona­l US political means of courting young voters - forcing presidenti­al candidates to turn to Snapchat instead. The photo-sending app that boasts 229 million users - better known for filters that turn your face into a puppy or a vampire - is a new battlefiel­d for opponents President Donald Trump and former vice president Joe Biden, both of whom are in their 70s.

The stakes are high: Gen Z (ages 18-23) and millennial­s (ages 24-39) together make up more than 35 percent of the American voting population. For them, traditiona­l forms of social media, particular­ly Facebook and Twitter, are increasing­ly growing passe. In the race to win them over, Trump’s reelection team boasts a solid lead, nor have they suffered from lockdowns to slow the spread of COVID-19.

“The President’s campaign has always prioritize­d digital tools and data infrastruc­ture, so it was a very natural shift to 100 percent digital campaignin­g,” Ken Farnaso, the Trump campaign deputy press secretary, told AFP. The 100-person strong team is also backing a candidate who is infamous for his own prolific social media use. “It’s clear that we’re wiping the floor with Biden’s campaign,” Farnaso said. As a result, the number of subscriber­s to Trump’s Snapchat account tripled in eight months, easily reaching 1.5 million. Biden’s team declined to share its number of Snapchat subscriber­s.

Aviator filter

“I’m sure we can do better on the internet,” Biden himself admitted during an interview shared on Snapchat two weeks ago, from his home in Delaware. He had been sheltering there until Monday, when he made his first public appearance in months for a Memorial Day ceremony, sporting a black face mask. “The fact is, we’re trying,” he said.

His team has refused to provide details on its arsenal but insists that it has been working twice as hard on digital campaignin­g since the start of the pandemic. Top staffers for his former rivals Elizabeth Warren, Beto O’Rourke and Kamala Harris have also been recruited to beef up the ranks. On his Snapchat profile, the former number two to President Barack Obama keeps it cool: he is shown without a tie but with his signature aviator sunglasses. Followers can try on the same pair thanks to a custom campaign filter.

Subscriber­s to Trump’s account, meanwhile, are invited to relive one of the president’s rallies in Wisconsin, a state crucial to winning the election on November 3. Trump’s team also posts videos openly mocking his opponents gaffes on Snapchat that are then shared on a massive scale. If Snapchat - whose initial premise was sending self-deleting photos - is popular among the candidates, it is also because the platform has expressed a desire to independen­tly and actively participat­e in American political life.

“Snapchat believes that there is no more powerful form of self-expression than helping its users engage in democracy and exercise their right to vote,” a spokespers­on told AFP. The app, according to the spokespers­on, reaches 75 percent of Gen Z-ers and millennial­s on a daily basis - a figure it intends to take advantage of. The platform had already inspired 450,000 young people to register to vote for the mid-term elections in 2018, and it plans on developing new in-app features as the election approaches.

Recently, Snapchat began offering users voter registrati­on links during the week following their 18th birthday. Between 300,000 and 500,000 Snapchat turn 18 per month. Conversely, its competitor TikTok, owned by Chinese company ByteDance, has opted to stick with the app’s traditiona­lly light-hearted aesthetic. But that doesn’t stop political content from flourishin­g on the platform. A video of a man in a hotdog costume listing all the reasons why he thought Biden - whose campaign has been rocked by a sexual assault accusation - was a “pervert” has racked up more than 530,000 likes on TikTok.—

 ?? — AFP ?? WASHINGTON: Invited guests listen as US President Donald Trump speaks during an event in the Rose Garden at the White House on May 26, 2020 in Washington, DC.
— AFP WASHINGTON: Invited guests listen as US President Donald Trump speaks during an event in the Rose Garden at the White House on May 26, 2020 in Washington, DC.

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