Talk Tracker - Economy, Pandemic and Race Relations by Candidate and State Grouping
CHARTS ARE AUTOMATICALLY UPDATED EVERY 3 DAYS
What we Measure and Report On
Several reputed polls like the NBC News/WSJ Survey, Pew Research Center survey, NPR/PBS News Hour/Marist Poll and the CNN SSRS Poll have reported that the top three dominant issues on voters’ minds in the upcoming elections are: the coronavirus pandemic, economy and race relations. NMDSI’s Elecurator project is therefore collecting and analyzing posts on major social media sites like Twitter and Reddit as well as on online blogs and forums about these three topics.
For each of the three dominant issues, we present the following analyses:
1. Total number of social media and online posts (number of mentions): We compare the number of daily mentions on the topic that also refer to Joe Biden or Donald Trump starting from June 1, 2020.
2. Total number of people who could have seen the posts on Twitter or (impressions): over the same period, we chart the daily impressions of mentions on the topic that also refer to Joe Biden or Donald Trump
3. Number of people who could have seen posts on the topic on Twitter and other social media sites like Reddit, forums and blogs or (reach): over many days, we compare the reach of mentions on the topic that also refer to Joe Biden and Donald Trump
4. Comparisons of Joe Biden and Donald Trump on number of mentions, impressions, and reach across the following seven groups of states:
Strongly Republican: Alabama, Arkansas, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, West Virginia, Wyoming
Likely Republican: Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, South Carolina, Utah
Leaning Republican: Alaska, Iowa, Montana, Texas
Toss up: Arizona, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Ohio
Leaning Democrat: Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania Wisconsin
Likely Democrat: Colorado, New Mexico, Virginia
Strongly Democrat: California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington