obama making friends on the web
By
Jose Antonio Vargas
Updated: 10:11
p.m. CT Feb 16, 2007
Late on the day
that Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) announced he was forming a presidential
exploratory committee, Farouk Olu Aregbe logged on to Facebook.com, the
popular online community where college students post profiles, share
photos and blog. On a whim he created a group called "One Million
Strong for Barack."
"I remember
thinking, there's got to be more supporters out there," said Farouk,
26, who advises student government at the University at Missouri at
Columbia.
Farouk's group
had 100 members in the first hour. In less than five days, 10,000. By
the third week, nearly 200,000. Yesterday, a month after he created the
group, it clocked in 278,100 members. There are more than 500
Obama groups on Facebook. One of the first, "Students for Barack Obama"
was created on July 7 by Meredith Segal, a junior at Bowdoin College
who first heard of Obama when he gave the keynote speech at the
Democratic National Convention in 2004. Instead of starting "a petition
or something" to encourage the freshman senator to run for president,
she turned to her Facebook page, created a group and invited people
(first her friends, later strangers) to join. Now it's a
political action committee with nearly 62,000 members and chapters in
80 colleges, the most structured grass-roots student movement --
there's a director of field operations, an Internet director, a finance
director and a blog team director -- in the presidential campaign so
far. "Young people are on the Web," said Segal, 21. "That's how we're
organizing."
At
the center of a virtual community
Obama's
Facebook supporters post photos of Obama on their pages alongside
snapshots of birthday parties, nephews and girlfriends. They link to
the latest Obama news ("Gov. Kaine of Va. to endorse Obama"), talk
about their favorite Obama quotes ("I think mine is, 'I'm so
overexposed, I'm making Paris Hilton look like a recluse' ") and engage
in a 24-hour conversation about their candidate ("I told you guys
sometime back that once Obama announces his candidacy, the sharks are
going to come biting . . ."), linked to one another in the kind of
community reserved for longtime players of the video game World of
Warcraft or incessant "American Idol" fans. A few weeks ago, Segal's
group staged a rally at George Mason University that drew an estimated
3,000 students -- and an appearance from Obama himself. This past
Sunday, her group's Iowa State University chapter helped promote a
rally that attracted more than 5,000.
While the
Illinois senator's presidential campaign has outpaced his rivals in the
enthusiasm it has generated on Facebook and other social networking
sites such as Friendster.com and MySpace.com, no one knows whether such
online excitement can translate to votes. Ask Howard Dean, the
Web candidate of 2004. The former Democratic Vermont governor raised
millions of dollars on the Web, generated huge amounts of buzz and then
learned during the Iowa caucuses that online excitement did not
guarantee offline foot soldiers -- or the right foot soldiers in a
state that likes its volunteers homegrown. Meetup.com helped energize
the Dean campaign, but more sophisticated social networking sites such
as Facebook, Friendster and MySpace were not a factor during the 2004
election. A recent Pew Research Center poll, however, reported that 54
percent of 18-to-25-year-olds have used them. And Joe Trippi, who
spearheaded Dean's e-campaign, is among those who believe they will
play a significant role in the current race. "It took our campaign six
months to get 139,000 people on an e-mail list," Trippi said. "It took
one Facebook group, what, barely a month to get 200,000? That's
astronomical."
Peter Levine,
deputy director of the Center for Information and Research on Civic
Learning and Engagement, a nonpartisan research center at the
University of Maryland that studies young voters, predicts what he
calls "the Facebook Effect." "Everybody -- the pundits, the
online strategists -- have been waiting for the first candidate to
really hit a home run with the social networking sites," Levine said.
"Obama's message is attractive to a certain type of young person. He's
saying, 'You have a role to play. This is about you. About your role.'
There's a real hunger for that kind of message." Added Todd
Zeigler of the Bivings Group, a D.C.-based Internet communications firm
that works with Republicans: "The key point here is that the support
for Obama on these social networking sites is not being driven by the
campaign itself. It is something spontaneous as opposed to something
the campaign itself is orchestrating. This shows a real enthusiasm for
Obama's candidacy among young people that you aren't seeing for any
other candidates at this point."
Obama's main
Democratic opponents, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.) and former
senator John Edwards (N.C.), have also used the Web to speak directly
to voters, sidestepping mainstream media. But the Illinois senator's
campaign seems to have taken some of its cues from sites such as
Facebook. The campaign Web site, launched last Saturday, allows
visitors to blog, keep tab of their fundraising contributions, make a
list of events and so on. And there is a Facebook link on the bottom of
his home page.
K. Daniel
Glover, who edits National Journal's Technology Daily, said that for
candidates, "it's all about using the Internet to connect to people,"
the same way candidates connect with the local precinct chairmen and
state party officials. But Glover cautioned against expecting too much
from the Internet, especially when it comes to younger voters. "I don't
think anyone is going to be elected because he/she is all the rage on
Facebook," he said.
Clinton has
about the same number of sites as Obama, but the largest has only about
3,000 members, and many of the sites are maintained by opponents. For
every group called "African-Americans for Hillary Rodham Clinton" (95
members), there is a group called "A second Bush was bad enough, don't
give me a second Clinton" (55 members). Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) has
some presence on the site; a group called "John McCain in 2008" has
1,617 members. And though Obama himself has a few detractors -- a group
that calls itself "Anybody That Would Support Barack Obama for
President is a Moronic Liberal" has 424 members -- no one comes close
to his overall popularity.
By 11 a.m.
yesterday, "One Million Strong for Barack" had 278,100 members. Two and
a half hours later, 278,537. Three hours later, 279,070.