Saturday Star

Million marching women isn’t a tea party

But it takes more than social media to make a sustainabl­e social movement

- HAYLEY TSUKAYAMA

LAST week, at least a million marchers came to Washington – sparked by a Facebook post from one woman with no history of activism.

Last weekend the internet exploded again in discussion about President Donald Trump’s travel suspension order, and many used social media to get together and protest the decision.

Twitter said that more than 25 million tweets were sent about the order – as compared to 12 million about Trump’s inaugurati­on.

Facebook said its users generated 151 million “likes, posts, comments and shares” related to the ban, less than the 208 million interactio­ns generated about the inaugurati­on.

The companies didn’t reveal how many of those were aimed at organising, but the social media calls to get people to protest are a testament to the power of these platforms to move people.

The real question, however, is whether this burgeoning new movement can avoid the fate of many so others kick-started by the power of social networks – only to find that it’s much harder to make political change than to make a popular hashtag.

The internet has had some major protest moments before, with mixed results.

Each time, media outlets hailed each wave of protests as the start of a new era of the modern protest as hundreds, thousands – or even hundreds of thousands – of people used their social media accounts to sound off and organise.

But even some of the largest networked movements, such as the Arab Spring of 2011 or Occupy Wall Street, fell short of many people’s expectatio­ns.

These movements weren’t outright failures. But, looking back, it’s clear that they did lose energy and momentum in the face of proposing policy solutions and changes to the government.

Many point to disorganis­ation in the Occupy Wall Street movement, which resisted formal leadership, as one reason that it had a smaller impact than some expected when protesters started their months-long camp-outs in New York and Washington DC.

While some Occupy Wall Street protesters did try to organise, because the whole movement wasn’t speaking as one, it lost a lot of energy when it tried to move on to the next step.

Zeynep Tufekci, an associate professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who’s written a forthcomin­g book on the power and fragility of movements borne of social media, found in her research that the very ability for these movements to scale quickly is, in part, why they also can fall apart so quickly as compared to traditiona­l grassroots campaigns.

That highlights the crucial difference between old social campaigns and new ones. Scale, even in the form of a huge protest, does not equal success.

It used to. “In the past, essentiall­y, if you were going to organise a large-scale protest you needed to be an organisati­on that already had chapters in multiple cities and an extensive e-mail list,” said Evan Greer of Fight for the Future, which organises protests about tech-policy issues, including a successful fight against copyright bills in 2012. “You needed a fairly large structure in place.”

Now, organisers can bypass the time it takes to build up the infrastruc­ture for a massive march and all the publicity that comes with it.

But that also means their high-profile movements skip some crucial organising steps.

“Digitally networked movements look like the old movements.

“But by the time the civil rights movement had such a large march, they’d been working on (the issues) for 10 years – if not more,” Tufekci said.

The months or even years spent discussing logistics, leafleting and building a coalition, she said, were crucial to the success of the civil rights movements.

Other successful efforts, such as the Human Rights Campaign’s efforts to end the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy against allowing gay people to serve openly in the military were also rooted in organisati­on structures that had been developing and refining their demands for years to present a unified front.

Movements organised over social networks often have more trouble gelling, she said, particular­ly if different factions air their difference­s on Facebook and Twitter, drawing attention to fractures in a movement.

Has anyone done it right? Tufecki points to a group that Trump opponents may not like too much: the tea party.

The tea party movement also had its roots in protest organised through social media at about the same time as the Occupy movement, Tufekci said, but it was very focused on tactical goals once it came together.

“These were people who found each other, and were able to get together and do a lot of stuff – they arguably even elected a president,” she said, referring to Trump.

Both Occupy Wall Street and the tea party “had this quick scaling up, but one figured out how to make decisions together. And one just refused”, she said.

There is some hope among supporters that the Women’s March will buck some of the problems that protests organised over social media have faced in the past.

Washington Post contributo­r Emily Kalah Gade argued that this movement can succeed because, among other reasons, it drew from a wide range of the population, was non-violent and is based on the powerful idea that people’s rights are being taken away by the administra­tion, rather than pushing to break new ground.

Greer said that, in the end, social media attention is not enough to effect change. “Social media is a tactic,” she said.

“Tactics void of strategy don’t get us very far.”

 ??  ?? President Donald Trump sits in the Oval Office. He added fuel to fire recently with his travel ban on Muslim majority countries.
President Donald Trump sits in the Oval Office. He added fuel to fire recently with his travel ban on Muslim majority countries.

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