A small army of right-wing influencers descended upon Minneapolis following the ICE shooting of Renee Good, flooding social media platforms with pro-ICE content. These creators, journalists, and influencers portrayed protesters as lawless, demonstrations as riots, and anti-ICE activists as extremists or criminals. They filmed protests, rode along with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents and Customs and Border Protection, documented confrontations with protesters, and churned out competing narratives to the one promoted by the Trump administration. The content spread rapidly on social media platforms, receiving more views than left-leaning posts.
Data researchers at Magnitude Media found that right-wing influencers produced a large volume of content, drawing in viewers. However, engagement from left-leaning creators was higher, with 110 million interactions compared to 76 million for right-leaning posts. Right-wing content creation began to gain traction after January 9, when engagements by right-leaning content started closing the gap with left-leaning content.
Right-wing influencers like Nick Sortor and Eric Daugherty dominated top social media platforms, producing effective content that performed well. The structure of their success can be attributed to individual incentives and structural advantages. Right-wing creators have more experience showing up at action sites, financial resources from powerful donors, and ideological motivations. They also benefit from being allies of the administration and having moral support.
However, the left faces significant disadvantages in competing with right-wing content creation. One reason is the lack of a cohesive social media apparatus on the left. Funding for independent outlets and creators is limited compared to what exists on the right. Even prominent leftist streamers like Hasan Piker are dwarfed by their right-wing counterparts.
The phenomenon highlights a broader challenge faced by the left in America: the lack of resources and reach that the American right has. Until the anti-Trump coalition can muster similar resources, political debates will continue to be clouded by right-wing propaganda. As Ryan Broderick noted, "Nothing on the left that is the same in size online as the right."
Data researchers at Magnitude Media found that right-wing influencers produced a large volume of content, drawing in viewers. However, engagement from left-leaning creators was higher, with 110 million interactions compared to 76 million for right-leaning posts. Right-wing content creation began to gain traction after January 9, when engagements by right-leaning content started closing the gap with left-leaning content.
Right-wing influencers like Nick Sortor and Eric Daugherty dominated top social media platforms, producing effective content that performed well. The structure of their success can be attributed to individual incentives and structural advantages. Right-wing creators have more experience showing up at action sites, financial resources from powerful donors, and ideological motivations. They also benefit from being allies of the administration and having moral support.
However, the left faces significant disadvantages in competing with right-wing content creation. One reason is the lack of a cohesive social media apparatus on the left. Funding for independent outlets and creators is limited compared to what exists on the right. Even prominent leftist streamers like Hasan Piker are dwarfed by their right-wing counterparts.
The phenomenon highlights a broader challenge faced by the left in America: the lack of resources and reach that the American right has. Until the anti-Trump coalition can muster similar resources, political debates will continue to be clouded by right-wing propaganda. As Ryan Broderick noted, "Nothing on the left that is the same in size online as the right."