Tweeting on Presidential Coattails: Congressional Candidate Use of Twitter in the 2020 Elections

There is a long history of political science research focused on congressional candidates riding presidential coattails into office. The underlying theory for this potential relationship is relatively simple—when presidential nominees are popular, they can help bolster the electoral fortunes of the...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Evan Crawford, Mikaela Foehr, Nathaniel Yee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: HOPE 2022-03-01
Series:Journal of Quantitative Description: Digital Media
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journalqd.org/article/view/2876
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849237422497333248
author Evan Crawford
Mikaela Foehr
Nathaniel Yee
author_facet Evan Crawford
Mikaela Foehr
Nathaniel Yee
author_sort Evan Crawford
collection DOAJ
description There is a long history of political science research focused on congressional candidates riding presidential coattails into office. The underlying theory for this potential relationship is relatively simple—when presidential nominees are popular, they can help bolster the electoral fortunes of their down-ballot, co-partisan candidates. If this is right, congressional candidates should be incentivized to publicly align themselves with their co-partisan presidential nominee, albeit in strategic ways. We look for this relationship by constructing an original dataset of congressional candidate Twitter data and identifying the extent to which candidates mention presidential nominees during the 2020 campaign, a behavior we call “tweeting on coattails.” Our data allow us to describe relationships between “tweeting on coattails”, candidate party ID, and district-level electoral conditions. We find that overall, challengers tweeted more than incumbents, but incumbents were more likely to “tweet on coattails.” In addition, candidates of both parties “tweeted on coattails” more frequently if they were running in a district where their party’s nominee is popular. This relationship was not symmetric in magnitude, however, as Republicans were significantly more likely to tweet about Donald Trump than Democrats were to tweet about Joe Biden.
format Article
id doaj-art-cb6dde72a9be4548aede15a31e87c8df
institution Kabale University
issn 2673-8813
language English
publishDate 2022-03-01
publisher HOPE
record_format Article
series Journal of Quantitative Description: Digital Media
spelling doaj-art-cb6dde72a9be4548aede15a31e87c8df2025-08-20T04:01:57ZengHOPEJournal of Quantitative Description: Digital Media2673-88132022-03-01210.51685/jqd.2022.008 Tweeting on Presidential Coattails: Congressional Candidate Use of Twitter in the 2020 ElectionsEvan Crawford0Mikaela FoehrNathaniel YeeUniversity of San Diego There is a long history of political science research focused on congressional candidates riding presidential coattails into office. The underlying theory for this potential relationship is relatively simple—when presidential nominees are popular, they can help bolster the electoral fortunes of their down-ballot, co-partisan candidates. If this is right, congressional candidates should be incentivized to publicly align themselves with their co-partisan presidential nominee, albeit in strategic ways. We look for this relationship by constructing an original dataset of congressional candidate Twitter data and identifying the extent to which candidates mention presidential nominees during the 2020 campaign, a behavior we call “tweeting on coattails.” Our data allow us to describe relationships between “tweeting on coattails”, candidate party ID, and district-level electoral conditions. We find that overall, challengers tweeted more than incumbents, but incumbents were more likely to “tweet on coattails.” In addition, candidates of both parties “tweeted on coattails” more frequently if they were running in a district where their party’s nominee is popular. This relationship was not symmetric in magnitude, however, as Republicans were significantly more likely to tweet about Donald Trump than Democrats were to tweet about Joe Biden. https://journalqd.org/article/view/2876TwittercoattailscampaignsincumbentsTrumpBiden
spellingShingle Evan Crawford
Mikaela Foehr
Nathaniel Yee
Tweeting on Presidential Coattails: Congressional Candidate Use of Twitter in the 2020 Elections
Journal of Quantitative Description: Digital Media
Twitter
coattails
campaigns
incumbents
Trump
Biden
title Tweeting on Presidential Coattails: Congressional Candidate Use of Twitter in the 2020 Elections
title_full Tweeting on Presidential Coattails: Congressional Candidate Use of Twitter in the 2020 Elections
title_fullStr Tweeting on Presidential Coattails: Congressional Candidate Use of Twitter in the 2020 Elections
title_full_unstemmed Tweeting on Presidential Coattails: Congressional Candidate Use of Twitter in the 2020 Elections
title_short Tweeting on Presidential Coattails: Congressional Candidate Use of Twitter in the 2020 Elections
title_sort tweeting on presidential coattails congressional candidate use of twitter in the 2020 elections
topic Twitter
coattails
campaigns
incumbents
Trump
Biden
url https://journalqd.org/article/view/2876
work_keys_str_mv AT evancrawford tweetingonpresidentialcoattailscongressionalcandidateuseoftwitterinthe2020elections
AT mikaelafoehr tweetingonpresidentialcoattailscongressionalcandidateuseoftwitterinthe2020elections
AT nathanielyee tweetingonpresidentialcoattailscongressionalcandidateuseoftwitterinthe2020elections