Albany Times Union

The internet shrank Musk and Desantis

- ROSS DOUTHAT

If you had told me several months ago, immediatel­y after Elon Musk bought Twitter and Ron Desantis celebrated a thumping reelection victory, that Desantis would launch his presidenti­al campaign in conversati­on with Musk, I would have thought, intriguing: The rightward-trending billionair­e whose rockets and cars stand out in an economy dominated by apps and financial instrument­s meets the Republican politician whose real-world victories contrast with the virtual populism of Donald Trump.

The actual launch of Desantis’ presidenti­al campaign, in a Twitter Spaces event that crashed repeatedly and played to a smaller audience than he would have claimed just by showing up on Fox, instead offered the political version of the lesson that we’ve been taught repeatedly by Musk’s stewardshi­p of Twitter: The internet can be a trap.

For the Tesla and Spacex mogul, the trap was sprung because Musk wanted to attack the groupthink of liberal institutio­ns, and seeing that groupthink manifest on his favorite social media site, he imagined that owning Twitter was the key to transformi­ng public discourse.

But for all its influence, social media is still downstream of other institutio­ns — universiti­es, newspapers, television channels, movie studios, other internet platforms. Twitter is real life, but only through its relationsh­ip to other realities; it doesn’t have the capacity to be a hub of discourse, news gathering or entertainm­ent on its own. And many of Musk’s difficulti­es as the Twitter CEO have reflected a simple overestima­tion of social media’s inherent authority and influence.

Thus he’s tried to sell the privilege of verificati­on, the famous “blue checks,” without recognizin­g that they were valued because of their connection to realworld institutio­ns and lose value if they reflect a Twitter hierarchy alone. Or he’s encouraged his favored journalist­s to publish their scoops and essays on his site when it isn’t yet built out for that kind of publicatio­n. Or he’s encouraged media figures like Tucker Carlson and now politician­s like Desantis to run shows or do interviews on his platform, without having the infrastruc­ture in place to make all that work.

It’s entirely possible that Musk can build out that infrastruc­ture eventually, and make Twitter more capacious than it is today. But there isn’t some immediate social media shortcut to the influence he’s seeking. If you want Twitter to be the world’s news hub, you probably need

a Twitter newsroom. If you want Twitter to host presidenti­al candidates, you probably need a Twitter channel that feels like a profession­al newscast. And while you’re trying to build those things, you need to be careful that the nature of social media doesn’t diminish you to the kind of caricature­d role — troll instead of tycoon — that tempts everyone on Twitter.

That kind of diminishme­nt is what the Twitter event handed to Desantis, whose choppy launch may be forgotten but who would be wise to learn from what went wrong. There’s an emerging critique of the Florida governor that suggests that his whole persona is too online — that his talk about wokeness, wokeness, wokeness is pitched to a narrow and internetba­sed faction within the GOP, that he’s setting himself to be like Elizabeth Warren in 2020, whose promise of plans, plans, plans thrilled the wonk faction but fell flat with normal Democratic voters.

I think this critique is overdrawn. If you look at polling of Republican primary voters, the culture war appears to be a general concern rather than an elite fixation, and there’s a plausible argument that the conflict with the new progressiv­ism is the main thing binding the GOP coalition together.

But it does seem true that the conflict with progressiv­ism in the context of social media isa more boutique taste, and that lots of anti-woke conservati­ves aren’t particular­ly invested in whether the previous Twitter regime was throttling such-and-such right-wing influencer or taking orders from suchand-such “disinforma­tion” specialist. And it’s also true that Desantis is running against a candidate who, at any moment, can return to Twitter and bestride its feeds like a colossus, no matter whatever Republican alternativ­e the Chief Twit might prefer.

So introducin­g himself in that online space made Desantis look unnecessar­ily small — smaller than Musk’s presence and Trump’s absence, shrunk down to the scale of debates about shadowbann­ing and Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act. The Florida governor’s best self-advertisem­ent in a primary should be his promise to be more active in reality than Trump, with his claim to be better at actual governance made manifest through his advantage in flesh-pressing, campaign-trail-hitting energy.

The good news for Desantis is that he doesn’t have billions invested in a social media company, so having endured a diminishin­g introducti­on he can slip the trap and walk away — toward the crowds, klieg lights and the grass.

For Musk, though, escape requires either the admission of defeat in this particular arena or else a long campaign of innovation that eventually makes Twitter as big as he wrongly imagined it to be.

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