Thermometer of the presidential elections on social networks
Posted: Mon Dec 23, 2024 8:52 am
In November, Argentina elected its president and the winner was the one most talked about on social media, Mauricio Macri. The presidential elections in Peru are approaching, how much is being talked about each candidate?
In the last elections in Argentina, in the first and second round, the trend and distribution of the conversation on social networks coincided with the results of the actual vote, resulting in Mauricio Macri as the new president of that country:
graph1
This shows that social media has become the preferred forum for users to discuss topics of general interest such as a country's electoral contest, who is the favorite and most hated candidate, and the reasons behind voters' support or rejection of the candidates.
Quantico Trends wanted to know what the trend was in the conversation minnesota accountants email lists the main presidential candidates just a few months before the electoral contest in Peru. Below are the main findings of the study:
*Candidates analyzed: Alan Garcia, Alejandro Toledo, Cesar Acuna, Julio Guzman, Keiko Fujimori, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski and Veronika Mendoza.
From November 1 to December 13, there were more than 660,000 mentions of the seven major presidential candidates on social media and online outlets.
In November, Alan García led the conversation with 30% of the total digital conversation, followed by Keiko Fujimori (20.2%) and Pedro Pablo Kuczynski (18.7%)
In December (from December 1st to December 13th), the situation changed noticeably with the entry of César Acuña into the Top 3 of the conversation : Keiko Fujimori led the participation with 29.1%, followed by César Acuña (20.7%) and Alan García (17.2%), the latter considerably decreasing his number of mentions from one month to the next.
Pedro Pablo Kuczynski moved between 3rd and 4th place in the distribution of conversation in both months, maintaining a participation percentage between 15% and 18%.
Alejandro Toledo, Julio Guzmán and Verónika Mendoza are in last place, representing 13.6% of the conversation in November and 17.9% in December.
In the last elections in Argentina, in the first and second round, the trend and distribution of the conversation on social networks coincided with the results of the actual vote, resulting in Mauricio Macri as the new president of that country:
graph1
This shows that social media has become the preferred forum for users to discuss topics of general interest such as a country's electoral contest, who is the favorite and most hated candidate, and the reasons behind voters' support or rejection of the candidates.
Quantico Trends wanted to know what the trend was in the conversation minnesota accountants email lists the main presidential candidates just a few months before the electoral contest in Peru. Below are the main findings of the study:
*Candidates analyzed: Alan Garcia, Alejandro Toledo, Cesar Acuna, Julio Guzman, Keiko Fujimori, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski and Veronika Mendoza.
From November 1 to December 13, there were more than 660,000 mentions of the seven major presidential candidates on social media and online outlets.
In November, Alan García led the conversation with 30% of the total digital conversation, followed by Keiko Fujimori (20.2%) and Pedro Pablo Kuczynski (18.7%)
In December (from December 1st to December 13th), the situation changed noticeably with the entry of César Acuña into the Top 3 of the conversation : Keiko Fujimori led the participation with 29.1%, followed by César Acuña (20.7%) and Alan García (17.2%), the latter considerably decreasing his number of mentions from one month to the next.
Pedro Pablo Kuczynski moved between 3rd and 4th place in the distribution of conversation in both months, maintaining a participation percentage between 15% and 18%.
Alejandro Toledo, Julio Guzmán and Verónika Mendoza are in last place, representing 13.6% of the conversation in November and 17.9% in December.