Wazzup Pilipinas!
The people made over 35 million elections-related Tweets since the start of the year, with over 4 million Tweets sent on Election Day alone.
After three months of watching, hearing, and talking about the political candidates, the Filipino public has cast its vote and has elected a new set of government officials in the national and local levels. But what marked the difference for the election this year is the higher level of inclusiveness Filipinos enjoyed through the country’s first-ever #TwitterElection. Engaging the first-time voters who are heavy social media users, or one-third (17 million) of the country’s 50 million registered voters, is critically important for any candidate to win the election. And the people’s voices have been heard on Twitter with over 35 million elections-related Tweets sent since the start of the year, of which over 4 million Tweets came on Election Day (May 9th) alone.
There was global interest in the Philippines general election and this was reflected in the #TwitterElectionconversation, too. When you zoom out on the heatmap below, you can see the elections-related conversations on Twitter over the past 30 days from all over the world - from the US to UK to Europe to the Middle East to Asia Pacific - including Tweets from many Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs). For example, the three #PiliPinasDebates2016 Presidential TV debates generated Twitter conversations worldwide, nearly 5 million Tweets combined, with the last one on April 24, 2016 shown on the heatmap.
https://twitterdata.cartodb.com/viz/a5988730-13a5-11e6-90aa-0e5db1731f59/embed_map
“This has been a special #TwitterElection in the Philippines with its People Power grassroots efforts to get more young Filipinos to participate in the elections, all thanks to COMELEC’s partnership to understand how important social media can be for #Pilipinas2016. Twitter is the first place Filipinos go to find out what’s happening on the campaign trail as well as to see diverse conversations about the political candidates and election issues. The live conversations on Twitter, from the Presidential TV debates to Election Day,provide the pulse of the nation and enable any Filipino’s voice to be heard around the world” said Rishi Jaitly, Twitter’s Vice President of Media for the Asia Pacific and Middle East.
As Twitter is often a reflection of society, the most mentioned Presidential candidates on Twitter can be a leading indicator of people’s interests. Over the past 7 months (from October 12, 2015 to May 9, 2016), Rodrigo Duterte was the most discussed Presidential candidate on Twitter, accounting for 40% of all mentions, almost equal to the next two leading candidates (Jejomar Binay and Mars Roxas) combined.
As Twitter is often a reflection of society, the most mentioned Presidential candidates on Twitter can be a leading indicator of people’s interests. Over the past 7 months (from October 12, 2015 to May 9, 2016), Rodrigo Duterte was the most discussed Presidential candidate on Twitter, accounting for 40% of all mentions, almost equal to the next two leading candidates (Jejomar Binay and Mars Roxas) combined.
The Live Twitter Conversation on Election Day
The roar of the crowd was heard on Twitter with over 4 million Tweets on Election Day alone, or more than 10% of all elections-related conversations in 2016. The Twitter conversation peaked at 5,600 Tweets per minute at 7:30pm on May 9th as people began talking about the early voting results.
Embeddable chart: http://reverb.twitter.com/view/192327411560297321
The real-time nature of Twitter also provides live insights into the people’s preferences for their Presidential candidates on Election Day:
In this Twitter data chart, Santiago/Duterte/Binay all had around the same share of voice (roughly 30% of Presidential candidate mentions) on Election Day, but Duterte had broader voter interest as 1.5X more Twitter users Tweeted about him vs Santiago and a whopping 7X more Twitter users Tweeted about him vs Binay. Binay’s supporters were fewer, but more organized and passionate on Twitter, as they Tweeted more often to account for nearly the same amount of Tweets as Duterte’s supporters.
Another Twitter data chart for Election Day conversations showed that Binay started strongly, but he faded throughout most of the day. Meanwhile Duterte had the opposite reaction by starting slowly and peaking at the end of the polling day. Santiago also built up momentum throughout the day and spiked higher than Duterte when her supporters started questioning why the early polling results showed her in last place. Grace Poe spiked at the end of the day when she conceded defeat.
Filipino voices heard on Election Day
In fact, some of the most Retweeted Tweets on Election Day came from young Filipinos expressing their opinions about the early voting results. While they do not have a lot of followers, their Tweets resonated with thousands of Filipinos who shared their point of view.
Embeddable Tweet: https://twitter.com/rambotalabong/status/729638011009380352
Embeddable Tweet: https://twitter.com/AntoinetteLissa/status/729616734919909376
Voting rules violations were also being reported via Twitter on Election Day. Another most shared Tweet came from the @COMELEC spokesperson’s account:
Embeddable Tweet: https://twitter.com/jabjimenez/status/729496371644899332
And of course, Filipinos were proudly showing off their inked fingers on Twitter as a sign of their democratic right to vote for their next set of government leaders:
Embeddable Tweet: https://twitter.com/nikkiciara22/status/729541330930536449
Continue to follow all the elections-related conversations and candidates’ actions on Twitter using#Pilipinas2016, #PHvote and #HalalanResults as the voting results are tallied in the days ahead.
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