Los Angeles Times

Trump’s trail of tweets

Candidate has left a lot of evidence for charges of political flip-flops

- By Matt Pearce matt.pearce@latimes.com

Here’s a theory: It’d sure be easier for politician­s to get away with flip-flops if there weren’t a bunch of their old tweets lying around like crime-scene DNA.

Check out this exchange from Monday night’s presidenti­al debate:

HILLARY CLINTON: “Donald Trump thinks climate change is a hoax perpetrate­d by the Chinese. I think it’s real.”

DONALD TRUMP: “I did not. I did not. I do not say that. I do not say that.”

Except there’s this, a Trump tweet from 2012: “The concept of global warming was created by and for the Chinese in order to make U.S. manufactur­ing non-competitiv­e.”

Trump’s old tweet began picking up tens of thousands of retweets as the presidenti­al debate raged on. (Reports that Trump’s team had deleted the tweet mid-debate were inaccurate.)

It’s hard to imagine similar mass-sharing happening with a hard copy of a newspaper article, a yearsold clipping suddenly passing through thousands of curious hands. But thanks to Twitter, one of this election’s great accountabi­lity machines, what was old became new(s) again.

The phenomenon is also thanks in part to Trump himself, a prolific socialmedi­a user who, throughout this election, could have avoided storms of unfriendly retweets by deleting his old tweets — but he hasn’t, leaving himself a little more vulnerable to the searching eyes of his opponents.

Social media has been a dominant campaign medium in 2016, not just for the candidates but also for profession­al and amateur fact-checkers who have been doing their work with ferocious speed.

For gumshoes, it’s an arena of political argument aided by keyword searches, hyperlinks and screenshot­s, the kind of work that can be done on a smartphone while sitting on the couch. Opposition researcher­s, journalist­s and nonprofess­ionals alike have seen their handiwork go viral.

That means, for casual Twitter users, a candidate’s real-time remarks at a rally or a debate might appear in their feeds side-by-side with other users posting footage or transcript­s of contradict­ory past statements.

Trump, who fact-checkers say routinely peddles fake informatio­n — like the lie that President Obama was born in Africa — has disproport­ionately seen his old tweets become targets, emerging again and again as objects of criticism, renewed with as little effort as hitting the retweet button. (Retweets are definitely not always endorsemen­ts.)

Twitter in particular has long been known as a place where profession­als can lose their jobs or come under internatio­nal pressure for saying something — well, often something pretty stupid, if not merely controvers­ial. In recent years, online guides have offered recommenda­tions for how regular users can delete old tweets lest they become liabilitie­s.

The pressure is much higher on public figures. When comedian Trevor Noah won the job of hosting “The Daily Show,” he soon drew heat for old politicall­y incorrect Twitter jokes; the same thing happened last week to new “Saturday Night Live” cast member Melissa Villasenor.

Some politician­s have also gone on tweet-deleting escapades when a political situation suddenly goes sideways. Several lawmakers who welcomed Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl home from captivity in Afghanista­n in 2014 later backtracke­d when informatio­n emerged suggesting Bergdahl may have deserted from his platoon. (Bergdahl goes to trial in 2017.)

Hoping to prevent politician­s from editing the historical record, the Sunlight Foundation, a Washington-based transparen­cy advocacy group, runs a tool called Politwoops that tracks and preserves a record of when politician­s delete tweets.

Many of the deleted tweets snared by Politwoops are innocuous typos. But a few reveal statements withdrawn after second thoughts, like U.S. Rep. Jeff Miller’s (R-Fla.) 2012 tweet, “Was Obama born in the United States?”

Yet Trump has not scrubbed his own notorious “birther” tweets, which he only recently publicly disavowed. (Trump’s campaign did not respond to a request for comment.)

For a politician who has routinely made news with his tweets — from retweeting white supremacis­ts to congratula­ting himself after the Pulse nightclub mass shooting in Orlando, Fla. (“for being right on radical Islamic terrorism”) — Trump’s history of Twitter deletions in Politwoops is mostly for mispelling­s and bygone media appearance­s, rather than withdrawin­g substantiv­e remarks.

Trump, for example, drew criticism in August for tweeting: “Dwayne Wade’s cousin was just shot and killed walking her baby in Chicago. Just what I have been saying. African-Americans will VOTE TRUMP!”

Critics accused Trump of using a person’s death to pander to black voters, pointing out he hadn’t even bothered to offer condolence­s, and the Trump account soon deleted the tweet — so it could put up a new version of the same tweet, this time with NBA star Dwyane Wade’s name spelled correctly. It’s still there. Clinton’s Twitter account deletes a few tweets a month, though in each instance it’s not clear why. Clinton is better known for her tweet to Trump, “Delete your account” — a popular Internet joke — which has earned nearly 500,000 retweets.

Now, the question arises of how Trump changes — or doesn’t change — after the election, win or lose.

“In this election, we’re talking more about the tweets that aren’t deleted than the tweets that are, and that’s an interestin­g reflection on where we are and how we view social media,” said Josh Stewart, a spokesman at the Sunlight Foundation. “It would be interestin­g to see if the use of social media by politician­s changes after this election, or if he’s an outlier.”

 ?? Spencer Platt Getty Images ?? FOR SOME reason, Donald Trump hasn’t bothered to delete some old tweets, leaving himself vulnerable.
Spencer Platt Getty Images FOR SOME reason, Donald Trump hasn’t bothered to delete some old tweets, leaving himself vulnerable.
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