Tracking Twitter Reactions to the CNN/Tea Party Republican Debates
BY Nick Judd | Tuesday, September 13 2011
The post-debate spin room has moved online, with reporters looking to Twitter for reactions as much as to their usual bullpen of consultants and observers, and candidates taking jabs at one another in real time.
All of these are things we sort of already knew, to be honest, but the novelty clearly hasn't worn off.
The Atlantic senior editor Alexis Madrigal, for example, writes that whomever has the keys to President Barack Obama's campaign Twitter account is making a spectacle of the Republican debates by kibitzing from the sideline.
"Tonight, @BarackObama put out several tweets about the content of the Republican debate, mostly to link people back to the Obama 2012 campaign's GOP Debate Tracker. We all know, of course, that the campaigns watched each other," Madrigal wrote last night, during the CNN/Tea Party Express debate, "but it's fascinating to watch it in real-time, 14 months ahead of the election. It's like watching the champ shadowboxing to the televised fight of an opponent." (Madrigal also tips a hat to the New York Times' Anand Giridharadas.)
And Politico is carrying a round-up of quotes plucked from Twitter users' response to last night's debate in an item from Juana Summers:
But with the eight rivals debating for the second time in a week, Twitter also provided instant response to the candidates’ new arsenal of attacks. Michele Bachmann had some of the strongest response for her swing at Perry for his 2007 executive order requiring young girls in Texas to be vaccinated against HPV.
Twitter users said she threw a “zinger” at Perry, and that the Texas governor got “destroyed.”
While Newt Gingrich moved away from his role as media critic, Twitter users took his place, slamming moderator Wolf Blitzer when he asked multiple candidates — but not Ron Paul — about the Federal Reserve.