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  • 11
    Sep
    2012
    5:51pm, EDT

    Social media analysis: Democrats gain by redefining Ryan

    Crimson Hexagon Inc. and NBC News

    Social media report on the campaign for Monday, Sept. 10. Click the image for the full-size report.

    By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    At their national convention last week, Democrats had significant success redefining Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan as a flip-flopper on the budget and the economy, his marquee issues, according to NBCPolitics.com's computer-assisted analysis of hundreds of thousands of Twitter and Facebook posts.

    M. Alex Johnson M. Alex Johnson is a reporter for NBC News. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.

    The analysis indicates that — at least among Americans who are active on social media — the biggest swings in sentiment involved Ryan and President Barack Obama. During the two-week convention period, Obama twice trailed Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney by 8 points in a head-to-head comparison, but he had caught up to a dead heat by Monday:

    Crimson Hexagon Inc.

    Head-to-head voting preference for Barack Obama and Mitt Romney for Aug. 27 through Sept.10.

     


    NBC's Luke Russert and MSNBC's Alex Wagner discuss Rep. Paul Ryan's positions on the budget and defense spending.

    NBCPolitics.com analyzed about 1.5 million posts using a tool called ForSight, a data platform developed by Crimson Hexagon Inc., which many research and business organizations have adopted to gauge public opinion in new media. It isn't the same as traditional surveys, which seek to reflect national opinion. Instead, it's a broad, non-predictive snapshot of what's being said by Americans who follow politics and are active on Facebook, Twitter or both at a particular moment in time, and why they're saying it.

    More social media analysis from NBCPolitics.com


    Explainer: Can you scientifically quantify social media opinion?

    General opinions about Obama, Romney and Vice President Joe Biden remained relatively consistent throughout the analysis period, positive sentiment for all of whom moved no more than 4 points on any given day:

    Obama:

    Crimson Hexagon Inc.

    Positive and negative sentiment for Barack Obama for Aug. 27 through Sept. 10.

    Romney:

    Crimson Hexagon Inc.

    Positive and negative sentiment for Mitt romney for Aug. 27 through Sept. 10.

    Biden:

    Crimson Hexagon Inc.

    Positive and negative sentiment for Joe Biden for Aug. 27 through Sept. 10.

    Ryan was a wild card, swinging from a favorability rating near 50 percent around the end of the Republican convention to the mid-30s by the time the Democrats had finished in Charlotte:

    Ryan:

    Crimson Hexagon Inc.

    Positive and negative sentiment for Paul Ryan for Aug. 27 through Sept. 10.

    Democrats spent the week of their convention depicting Ryan as a talks-tough-but-votes-weak vacillator on the economy and an opponent of women's rights. By Monday — after the convention and a weekend of punditry — Ryan's votes for the Troubled Asset Relief Program and President George W. Bush's budgets dominated the negative discussion, along with significant criticism of his opposition to abortion:

    Crimson Hexagon Inc.

    Negative topics of conversation around Paul Ryan for Sept. 4 through Sept. 10.

    Facebook.com

    Twitter.com

    Facebook.com

    Twitter.com

    Ryan and the Republicans can take away one positive: Overall, specific commentary about Ryan continued to dwarf specific discussion about Biden, by a ratio of nearly 4-to-1 during the two-week convention period. Even last Thursday, the day Biden addressed the Democratic convention, Ryan was the topic of 55 percent of commentary that was specifically about either man.

    So while people, by and large, may not be saying nice things about him, at least they're talking about Paul Ryan.

    265 comments

    You know there is something wrong in "toon town" when the Repubs VP nominee lies about his own marathon time! Obama/Biden 2012 FORWARD!

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  • 3
    Sep
    2012
    11:55am, EDT

    Poll: Romney's convention speech gets low marks

    By NBC's Mark Murray
    Follow @mmurraypolitics

     

    A new Gallup poll shows that 38% of national adults rated Mitt Romney’s convention speech as either excellent or good -- that's the lowest percentage since Gallup began tracking this question in 1996. 

    The other past convention speeches:
    58% said Barack Obama’s ’08 speech was excellent or good
    52% said the same of John Kerry’s ’04 speech
    52% for Bob Dole’s ’96 speech
    51% for Al Gore’s ’00 speech
    51% for George W. Bush’s ’00 speech
    49% for Bush’s ’04 speech
    47% for John McCain’s 08 speech

    Joe Skipper / Reuters

    Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney takes the stage to formally accept the presidential nomination during the final session of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida, August 30, 2012.

    The Gallup poll also found that 40% of national adults said the GOP’s convention made them more likely to vote for Romney, while 38% said it made them less likely.

     

     


    1715 comments

    To be expected. Romney had nothing to say, other than "Queen Ann wants to pose on the White House balcony, so I order you to vote for me! After all, I am not accustomed to hearing "NO". Seriously, after that performance by Eastwood? Who was paying attention to MItty?

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  • 31
    Aug
    2012
    12:56pm, EDT

    Romney's health plan, war kept out of RNC spotlight

    By Michael O'Brien, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    TAMPA, Fla. – Among Mitt Romney’s many virtues and accomplishments listed Thursday evening, one of his foremost achievements as governor – enacting sweeping health care reform – was noticeably absent.

    Also missing from most of this week’s convention was any mention of the winding-down wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, two of the engagements that had largely defined the Republican Party for much of the past decade.

    Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney addresses the RNC Thursday in Tampa, Fla.

    Two top officials from Romney’s time as governor of Massachusetts, Lt. Gov. Kerry Healey and Workforce Development Secretary Jane Edmonds, offered testimonials on the Republican presidential nominee’s behalf during the final night in Tampa.

    Slideshow: Republican National Convention

    But neither of them – and, really, none of the other speakers this week – so much as mentioned the landmark health care reform law Romney signed into law during his lone term in office.

    The convention included plenty of promises to undo “Obamacare,” the colloquial name for the health care overhaul President Barack Obama pushed through Congress.

    Joe Skipper / Reuters

    Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney takes the stage to formally accept the presidential nomination during the final session of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida, August 30, 2012.

    "We will champion small businesses, America’s engine of job growth," Romney said in his acceptance speech. “That means reducing taxes on business, not raising them … it means that we must rein in the skyrocketing cost of health care by repealing and replacing Obamacare."

    “The president has declared that the debate over government-controlled health care is over,” Republican vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan said in his Wednesday night address. “That will come as news to the millions of Americans who will elect Mitt Romney so we can repeal Obamacare.”

    But the convention all but glossed over “Romneycare,” the markedly similar Massachusetts law that Obama has often cited as a model for his own health care law.

    Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice delivers remarks at the 2012 RNC.

    Similarly, Romney made no mention of Iraq or Afghanistan, nor did former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, a major figure in orchestrating those two wars for the Bush administration.

    The only major figure to really make mention of either of the wars was Arizona Sen. John McCain, the 2008 Republican presidential nominee.

    "By committing to withdraw from Afghanistan before peace can be achieved and sustained, the president has discouraged our friends and emboldened our enemies, which is why our commanders did not recommend that decision and why they have said it puts our mission at greater risk," McCain said on Wednesday night.

    While speaking at the RNC, Senator John McCain, R-Ariz., explains why he disagrees with the way President Obama has handled foreign policy decisions over the past four years.

    Romney has struggled to distinguish himself from Obama in terms of how he would differently handle the two wars, and the economy is undoubtedly the prime issue of the 2012 election.

    But the Massachusetts law has always been a more politically thorny issue for Romney, having almost tripped up the nominee during the primary fight, precisely for those similarities to Obama’s reforms.

    “He is the worst Republican in the country to put up against Barack Obama,” former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum said in March of Romney because of that Massachusetts law.

    Bringing up Romney’s health care law would, at a minimum, risk cognitive dissonance on the issue; at worst, its mention could stir an angry reaction from the conservative delegates gathered here in Florida.

    But conventions are carefully scripted affairs that often help decipher what message a party will carry into the fall campaign. The Romney campaign made clear this week that the economy, jobs and Medicare will be at the core of this November’s election. But maybe not health care.

    1846 comments

    Mitt didn't think anyone would bring this up. He didn't plan any of this at all. Otherwise, he'd have already have some sanitized tax returns ready, he would have closed his offshore bank accounts, registered his boat in the United States instead of the Cayman Islands, etc. He simply can't plan and  …

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  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    11:27pm, EDT

    Romney accepts nomination, says 'The time has come to turn the page'

    By Michael O'Brien, NBC News
    Follow @mpoindc

     

    TAMPA, Fla. – Accepting the Republican presidential nomination, Mitt Romney vowed to move America past what he called the “disappointments” of President Barack Obama’s four years in office if elected to the White House in November.

    In a speech that hearkened back to an America typified by Romney’s upbringing “in the middle of the century in the middle of the country,” the nominee argued he was the candidate best suited to rejuvenate a flagging economy.

    "Today, the time has come for us to put the disappointments of the last four years behind us," Romney said.

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    Mitt Romney stands with his wife, Ann Romney, and family as Paul Ryan and his wife, Janna Ryan, stand with their family on stage as balloons drop during the final night of Republican National Convention in Tampa.

    Using a traditional attack line against an incumbent president, Romney said, “This president can tell us that the next four years he’ll get it right.  But this president cannot tell us that you are better off today than when he took office.”

    “The time has come to turn the page.”

    The nationally televised address, the biggest of Romney’s political career, sought to better introduce him to Americans and erase the low favorable rating from which he suffered before the convention. He made barely veiled overtures toward winning women voters, among whom he trails Obama by 10 points in the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.

    Romney's personal side extolled at RNC

    But Romney also attempted to project a forward looking vision of America, mentioning the word “future” a total of 13 times during the speech, and the word “tomorrow” three times.

    In terms of policy, Romney leaned heavily on the broad planks he’s already outlined as a candidate. He hit Obama on taxes, health care and foreign policy, though he scarcely detailed his own plans on Medicare and made no mention of Iraq or Afghanistan.

    Romney’s speech instead intended to seize on voters' disillusionment in Obama, based on the lofty promises made by the then-Illinois senator during his 2008 campaign.

    "President Obama promised to slow the rise of the oceans and to heal the planet,” Romney said. “My promise – is to help you and your family.”

    Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney addresses the RNC Thursday, in Tampa, Fla.

    And as if to preempt Democratic criticism that he was rooting for failure, Romney said he had hoped for just the opposite.

    "I wish President Obama had succeeded because I want America to succeed. But his promises gave way to disappointment and division," Romney said. "This isn't something we have to accept. Now is the moment when we can do something. With your help we will do something."

    Watch Thursday night's RNC speeches

    Thursday was the culmination of a years-long effort by Romney to capture the nomination, a goal which had eluded his father, the former governor of Michigan. Romney unsuccessfully sought the GOP nomination in 2008, and struggled during the 2012 primaries to rally the party’s core of conservatives behind his candidacy before pulling away.

    This cycle’s primary – during which Romney boasted of having a “severely conservative” governing record – took its toll on him as a general-election candidate, giving fodder to Obama’s re-election team to use against the Republican during an unforgiving summer campaign.

    To that end, much of the Republican National Convention this week in Florida was directed toward reposturing Romney for a general-election audience.

    Romney relied on other surrogates earlier in the evening to round out his personal story. Friends, family members, and former co-workers delivered speeches about his leadership in business and government, along with his time in the Mormon Church – a less-discussed aspect of the nominee’s persona.

    Slideshow: Republican National Convention

    Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images

    Republicans gather in Tampa, Florida to officially nominate Mitt Romney and his running mate, Paul Ryan, as the party's candidates for the 2012 presidential election.

    Launch slideshow

    There were high and low points throughout the convention, and some unusual moments – such as actor Clint Eastwood’s ad-libbed speech to a chair jokingly intended to represent Obama.

    Romney sought to address several of his most glaring political vulnerabilities in his acceptance speech. He tried to defray attacks on his career as co-founder of Bain Capital by describing some of the most successful byproducts of the venture capital group's best-known successes.

    And Romney celebrated the achievements of women in the private sector and in government, drawing on the example of his own mother's bid for the Senate.

    "As governor of Massachusetts, I chose a woman lieutenant governor, a woman chief of staff, half of my cabinet and senior officials were women, and in business, I mentored and supported great women leaders who went on to run great companies," Romney said.

    Romney and his veep nominee, Paul Ryan, will take no break from campaigning after a high-stakes week for their ticket, stumping Friday in Florida and Virginia and keeping a busy schedule throughout the weekend.

    Obama’s convention, meanwhile, will make the case for a second term at the Democratic National Convention next week in Charlotte, N.C.

    The dueling conventions – representing some of the few natural opportunities for candidates to bend the arc of the election – signal the onset of the most intense portion of the general election.

    Ryan and Romney, along with Obama and Vice President Joe Biden, will set out to a handful of battleground states over the next 67 days to sway a winnowed group of independents and swing voters who could determine the outcome of the election.

    One such state is Florida, the site of the Republican National Convention, and a state on which Romney’s fate might rest this November.

    Florida also plays host to one of the three officially sanctioned debates between Obama and Romney scheduled for this fall. (A lone vice presidential debate between Biden and Romney is also on the calendar.)

    By virtue of accepting the nomination, Romney now has access to tens of millions of dollars his campaign has raised for the general-election season. The advent of super PACs, political groups with no limits on fundraising or spending, has already pushed the cost of the 2012 election to unprecedented levels, and the price tag is only likely to skyrocket over the remainder of the campaign.

    3526 comments

    Mitt Romney for President!

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  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    9:08pm, EDT

    Friends' anecdotes shed light on Romney's personal side

    By Tom Curry, NBC News national affairs writer

    TAMPA, Fla. -- As Republicans prepared to welcome their presidential nominee to Thursday’s final session of the GOP convention in Tampa, Mitt Romney's friends and allies took on the job of persuading Americans that he's a man more worthy of their trust and their vote than President Barack Obama.

    David Goldman / AP

    Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney and Republican vice presidential nominee, Rep. Paul Ryan walk in for a group picture with their campaign staff at the Republican National Convention in Tampa on Thursday.

    A stream of character witnesses came before the delegates to testify that Romney was a man of compassion and integrity who’d devoted much of his life to helping others, both as a business executive and as a Mormon leader.

    Mormon Pam Finlayson recalled how Romney cared for her family when her daughter Kate was born prematurely, suffered a severe brain hemorrhage, and was close to death.

    When Romney came to visit Finlayson and her daughter in the hospital, “I could tell immediately that he didn't just see a tangle of plastic and tubes and wires; he saw our beautiful little girl, and he was clearly overcome with compassion for her.”

    Although her daughter survived, she became gravely ill at age 26 and died. “In the midst of making the final decision to run for president ... when they heard of Kate's passing, both Mitt and Ann paused, to personally reach out to extend us sympathy, and express their love.”

    She said, “It seems to me when it comes to loving our neighbor, we can talk about it, or we can live it. The Romneys live it every single day.”

    Rep. Connie Mack, R-Fla., addresses the RNC Thursday, in Tampa.

    Mormon Grant Bennett, who served as an assistant pastor under Romney said, “Mitt prayed with and counseled church members seeking spiritual direction, single mothers raising children, couples with marital problems, youth with addictions, immigrants separated from their families, and individuals whose heat had been shut off.”

    He said, “Mitt did what he challenged us to do. He led by example.”

    Bob White, one of Romney’s partners at Bain Capital, said “Our investors included pension funds, colleges and charities with noble missions. We would invest wisely and treat their money as carefully as our own.”

    He added, “And when things went wrong, we would not blame others. Finally, he took decisive action. Mitt never hesitated. He made the tough decisions, coalesced the team, and moved forward.”

    The testimonials to Romney’s character were delivered against a backdrop of polling data that show a likeability gap between Romney and Obama.

    U.S. Olympians, including Kim Rhode, Mike Eruzione and Derek Parra, address the RNC Thursday, in Tampa, Fla.

    In the most recent NBC News/ Wall Street Journal poll, 58 percent of respondents said Obama was the more “easygoing and likable” candidate, while only 23 percent said the same of Romney. Fifty two percent saw Obama as caring more about average people, while only 30 percent saw Romney in that light.

    Emphasis on Florida
    But the testimony Thursday night to Romney’s admirable qualities will be in vain if he doesn't win Florida’s 29 electoral votes.

    Under most electoral vote scenarios, Florida is a must-win state for Romney. So it wasn’t surprising that Thursday’s featured speakers included Floridians: Sen. Marco Rubio, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and Rep. Connie Mack, who is the GOP Senate candidate.

    Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush speaks to the RNC while being joined on stage by educator Sean Duffy and school choice beneficiary Frantz Placide.

    Rubio, who introduced Romney, said Obama was promoting big government ideas. "Ideas that people come to America to get away from" and "threaten to make America more like the rest of the world, instead of helping the world become more like America," Rubio said.

    Earlier, Jeb Bush delivered a short tribute to his brother, former president George W. Bush. “He kept us safe,” he said, drawing huge cheers from the delegates.

    Then addressing Obama, Bush said, “Mr. President, it is time to stop blaming your predecessor for your failed economic policies. You were dealt a tough hand but your policies have not worked. In the fourth year of your presidency, a real leader would accept responsibility for his actions and you haven’t done it.”

    Bush then devoted much of his speech to public education reform, giving parents the choice of which schools they children should attend.

    “I know it’s hard to take on the unions. They fund campaigns. They’re well-organized,” he said , and on Election Day, union members show up. “Meanwhile, the kids aren’t old enough to vote. But you and I know who deserves a choice. Gov. Romney knows it, too.”

    Slideshow: Republican National Convention

    Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images

    Republicans gather in Tampa, Florida to officially nominate Mitt Romney and his running mate, Paul Ryan, as the party's candidates for the 2012 presidential election.

    Launch slideshow

     

     

     

    390 comments

    Can't let anyone think Romney is a decent human being. That will ruin the narrative they have worked so hard to create.

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  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    9:06pm, EDT

    Thursday night's RNC speeches

    The NBC Politics team has curated some of the notable speeches from the final night of the Republican National Convention in Tampa. 

    Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney addresses the RNC Thursday, in Tampa, Fla.

    Florida Senator Marco Rubio's speech to the Republican National Convention focused on family and faith, while also jabbing at Obama administration policies during his introduction of GOP nominee Mitt Romney.

    Florida Sen. Marco Rubio's speech to the Republican National Convention focused on family and faith, while also jabbing at Obama administration policies during his introduction of GOP nominee Mitt Romney. 

    Hollywood legend Clint Eastwood speaks at the RNC Thursday, in Tampa, Fla.

    U.S. Olympians, including Kim Rhode, Mike Eruzione and Derek Parra, address the RNC Thursday, in Tampa, Fla.

    Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush speaks to the RNC while being joined on stage by educator Sean Duffy and school choice beneficiary Frantz Placide.

    Rep. Connie Mack, R-Fla., addresses the RNC Thursday, in Tampa.

    Newt and Callista Gingrich tell the RNC that Mitt Romney has the same belief in the core values of the Republican party that former President Ronald Reagan once held.

     

    36 comments

    Clint Eastwood was perfect in his depiction Of President O. An empty chair, full of empty promises. Four years of blaming the other guy, but offering no real fixes for the problems we face.

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  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    6:01pm, EDT

    Romney to say: 'Now is the time to restore the promise of America'

     

    By NBC's Mark Murray

    In the remarks he'll make accepting the Republican presidential nomination, Mitt Romney will offer a harsh indictment of Barack Obama's presidency, as well as promise to create 12 million jobs in his first four years as president, according to excerpts released by his campaign.

    "Today the time has come for us to put the disappointments of the last four years behind us, to put aside the divisiveness and the recriminations, to forget about what might have been and to look ahead to what can be," Romney is expected to say.

    "Now is the time to restore the promise of America," he will add. "Many Americans have given up on this president but they haven’t ever thought about giving up. Not on themselves. Not on each other. And not on America."

    More Romney: "I am running for president to help create a better future -- a future where everyone who wants a job can find one. Where no senior fears for the security of their retirement. An America where every parent knows that their child will get an education that leads them to a good job and a bright horizon. And unlike the president, I have a plan to create 12 million new jobs." 

    Romney also talks about his faith.

    "Like a lot of families in a new place with no family, we found kinship with a wide circle of friends through our church. When we were new to the community it was welcoming and as the years went by, it was a joy to help others who had just moved to town or just joined our church. We had remarkably vibrant and diverse congregations of all walks of life and many who were new to America. We prayed together, our kids played together and we always stood ready to help each other out in different ways."

    And he makes a big pitch to women.

    "My mom and dad were true partners, a life lesson that shaped me by everyday example. When my mom ran for the Senate, my dad was there for her every step of the way. I can still hear her saying in her beautiful voice, “Why should women have any less say than men, about the great decisions facing our nation?”

    "I wish she could have been here at the convention and heard leaders like Governor Mary Fallin, Gov. Nikki Haley, Gov. Susana Martinez, Sen. Kelly Ayotte and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice." 

    "As governor of Massachusetts, I chose a woman Lt. governor, a woman chief of staff, half of my cabinet and senior officials were women, and in business, I mentored and supported great women leaders who went on to run great companies."

    271 comments

    Oh Brother! Here we go... After Ryan's "pants on fire" speech last night, I had to take my BS meter in today and have it re-calibrated! It will be interesting to see if Willard is as truthfully challenged tonight as his running mate! a future where everyone who wants a job can find one.

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  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    6:31pm, EDT

    Social media analysis: Ryan called out for claims in convention speech

    Crimson Hexagon Inc. and NBCPolitics.com

    Overall election sentiment Aug. 28, 2012. Click the image for the full-size version.

    By M. Alex Johnson, NBC News

    Paul Ryan was getting hammered on social media for what commenters say was his dishonesty in his address Wednesday night at the Republican National Convention, according to NBCPolitics.com's computer-assisted analysis of thousands of Twitter and Facebook posts through midday Thursday. But the controversy didn't appear to be changing many people's votes.

    M. Alex Johnson M. Alex Johnson is a reporter for NBC News. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.

    Ryan, whom many Americans were getting their first long look at as his party's vice presidential nominee, made several assertions Wednesday night that many nonpartisan watchdogs and news organizations called mostly false or misleading.

    Paul Ryan may have gotten a rock star reception Wednesday at the Republican National Convention, but the White House pushed back aggressively on the veracity of his entire speech. NBC's Chuck Todd reports.


    Ryan was most severely criticized for two attacks on President Barack Obama:

    • Ryan said Obama broke a promise to make sure that a General Motors plant in Janesville, Wis. — Ryan's hometown — would stay in business. The plant did close, but as was reported at the time, it ended operations in December 2008, before Obama even took office.
    • Ryan also criticized Obama for doing "exactly nothing" with the recommendations of a bipartisan commission he appointed to review the nation's debt crisis. He neglected to mention that he was a member of the commission — and that he voted against the recommendations himself.

    NBCPolitics.com uses a tool called ForSight, a data platform developed by Crimson Hexagon Inc., which many research and business organizations have adopted to gauge public opinion in new media. It isn't the same as traditional surveys, which seek to reflect national opinion; instead, it's a broad, non-predictive snapshot of what's being said by Americans who follow politics and are active on Facebook, Twitter or both at a particular moment in time, and why they're saying it.

    More social media analysis from NBCPolitics.com

    For this report, the sample collected posts between the beginning of Ryan's speech Wednesday night and 1 p.m. ET Thursday.

    Representative posts during that period and a visual representation of discussion topics indicate that "lies" appears prominently in negative commentary on Ryan's address. So do slams at his voting record in Congress, a consistent driver of negative sentiment in NBCPolitics.com's social media data since his selection as Mitt Romney's running mate Aug. 11:

    Crimson Hexagon Inc. and NBCPolitics.com

    General topics of negative conversation around Paul Ryan, 8 p.m. ET Wednesday to 1 p.m. ET Thursday. Some cells record rebuttals to positive commentary.

    Twitter.com

    Twitter.com

    Twitter.com

    Positive comment was mainly expressed in general terms, in sharp contrast to the specific complaints others had:

    Crimson Hexagon Inc. and NBCPolitics.com

    General topics of positive conversation around Paul Ryan, 8 p.m. ET Wednesday to 1 p.m. ET Thursday. Some cells record rebuttals to negative commentary.

    Facebook.com

    Twitter.com

    The reception to Ryan's speech doesn't appear to changed many people's minds, however, according to NBCPolitics.com's separate monitor tracking Election Day voting intentions.

    Before the address, 36 percent of social media posts expressing a clear preference backed the Romney-Ryan ticket, compared with 33 percent that supported Obama and Vice President Joe Biden. In the 17 hours afterward, that gap had narrowed by only one point — to 35 percent to 34 percent.

    What impact will social media have on Decision 2012? NBC News' Lou Dubois and Alex Johnson join Joy-Ann Reed of theGrio.com, Liz Heron of The Wall St. Journal and Daniel Sieberg of Google Plus to discuss what the campaigns and voters are saying online.

    436 comments

    After having followed 13 presidential elections, I can't ever recall the posturing and lies that this election has evoked. Say anything, promise anything, sling anything. So little is true, so much of it just platitudes and out of context gibberish. Consider this voter utterly alienated by the candi …

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  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    5:08pm, EDT

    Smile! Mitt Romney, Paul Ryan and staff pose for a group picture

    Mike Segar / Reuters

    Republican presidenial nominee Mitt Romney and vice presidential nominee Paul Ryan (center, front) pose with members of their staffs in the convention hall before the final session of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Florida, Aug. 30.

    Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

    Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney (center left) and Republican vice presidential candidate, Rep. Paul Ryan (center right) pose with campaign staffers for a photo during the final day of the Republican National Convention, Aug. 30.

    Peter Alexander, Kelly O'Donnell and Luke Russert preview the last day of the Republican National Convention.

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    On the final day of the Republican National Convention, Mitt Romney, Paul Ryan and their staffs got together to have a group picture made. I'm guessing the official photographer is the one up on the ladder and the other photographers are members of the press and other RNC attendees. As a former photographer, I know you have to take enough frames to be sure you've got one with everyone smiling, eyes open and all the faces clearly visible. With the size of this group, that can be challenging. Looks like Reuters photographer Mike Segar and Getty photographer Chip Somodevilla found a good vantage point as well. 

    Slideshow: Republican National Convention

    Win Mcnamee / Getty Images

    Republicans gather in Tampa, Florida to officially nominate Mitt Romney and his running mate, Paul Ryan, as the party's candidates for the 2012 presidential election.

    Launch slideshow

    Tonight Mitt Romney takes the stage to address the convention and has the chance to reshape the arc of the presidential campaign. When he accepts the party's nomination tonight on national television, he'll become the official GOP nominee.

    Last night, Paul Ryan officially accepted the nomination to be the GOP nominee for vice president. 

    More photos from the RNC on PhotoBlog 

    Full coverage

    7 comments

    I'm laughing - that was half the people at the convention!!!! And, let's see - hmmmm there is one almost black face! Amazing for such an inclusive group! For a man who has all the money in the world, you'd think he'd get those yellow teeth whitened! Obama/Biden 2012

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    Explore related topics: politics, gop, mitt-romney, paul-ryan, decision-2012, rnc-2012
  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    4:51pm, EDT

    Nominees' acceptance speeches -- fine, forgettable, or defiant

    Mladen Antonov / AFP - Getty Images

    Mitt Romney talks to a technician during a sound check session at the Tampa Bay Times Forum on Thursday ahead of his speech at the Republican National Convention.

    By Tom Curry, NBC News national affairs writer

    TAMPA, Fla. -- For a candidate seeking to unseat an incumbent commander in chief, there are few opportunities more important than that first nationally televised speech as a presidential nominee; a unique opportunity to speak not just to the core of the party, but to voters all across the country. 

    When Mitt Romney delivers his acceptance speech Thursday night in Tampa, he’ll be following the footsteps of previous presidential challengers, who either inspired or alienated voters with their convention addresses.

    For the many Americans who pay only occasional attention to the presidential campaign, Romney will have the chance to demonstrate who he is, what he believes, and where he hopes to lead the nation.

    Previous candidates who, like Romney, were trying to defeat an incumbent have delivered acceptance speeches which fall into several types; some of which Romney will surely avoid.

    Unapologetic and defiant
    When Sen. Barry Goldwater, R- Ariz., won the Republican nomination in 1964, he refused to camouflage or retreat from his conservative beliefs. His speech to the convention in San Francisco was perhaps the most uncompromising in American political history.

    Check out a 360 degree, panoramic image of the RNC

    A grim-looking Goldwater told the crowd, “The good Lord raised this mighty Republic to be a home for the brave and to flourish as the land of the free, not to stagnate in the swampland of collectivism, not to cringe before the bully of communism.”

    For Republican moderates who were alarmed by Goldwater’s threats of using nuclear weapons and his musings about ending Social Security, he had a message: go elsewhere. “Those who do not care for our cause, we don't expect to enter our ranks in any case,” he said.

    The convention had been roiled by a party platform fight over condemning the John Birch Society and other groups called “extremist” by the media. Goldwater took on the controversy directly with his famous lines: “I would remind you that extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. And let me remind you also that moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue.”

    Romney's RNC speech: A chance to reshape campaign arc

    None of this helped Goldwater in his uphill battle against President Lyndon Johnson, but in all likelihood Goldwater was going to lose the election anyway. Goldwater’s speech did at least provide one model of how to go down to defeat in the most defiant way.

    Although not quite as hard-edged as Goldwater’s speech, 1996 Republican nominee Bob Dole’s acceptance speech also had a stern tone. Dole denounced officials in President Bill Clinton’s administration as "a corps of elite who never grew up, never did anything real, never sacrificed, never suffered, and never learned ... ."

    He promised to be the nation’s toughest cop: "If I win, the lives of violent criminals are going to be hell,” he vowed to pursue terrorists “to the ends of the earth" and he said, “We should not have here a single illegal immigrant … .”

    Candid, sincere, populist ... and ill-timed
    In 1984, by the time Democratic challenger Walter Mondale spoke to his party’s convention in San Francisco, the signs were clear that the economy had recovered from its worst recession since World War II and that incumbent President Ronald Reagan would be hard to beat.

    Mondale -- the leader of a party that had never made fiscal austerity its central creed -- chose to offer himself as a truth teller and fiscal hawk, pledging to reduce the budget deficit by two-thirds.

    “Here's the truth about the future: We are living on borrowed money and borrowed time,” he warned. “These deficits hike interest rates, clobber exports, stunt investment, kill jobs, undermine growth, cheat our kids, and shrink our future.”

    He predicted that “Whoever is inaugurated in January,” the tax burden would go up. “Anyone who says they won't is not telling the truth to the American people.” He added, “Mr. Reagan will raise taxes, and so will I. He won't tell you. I just did.”

    Mondale also mixed in a dose of typical Democratic populism of the kind still heard today: “To the corporations and the freeloaders who play the loopholes and pay no taxes, my message is: Your free ride is over.”

    Watch Wednesday night's RNC speeches here

    This did not prove to be an inspiring message to the voters: Mondale lost every state but his own, Minnesota.

    Also falling into the category of candid, sincere, and populist -- but even worse timed -- was the 1972 speech of Democratic candidate George McGovern.

    Bad convention management and fractious delegates meant that McGovern did not get to deliver his speech until 2:45 a.m. ET -- unthinkable, even suicidal, by today’s TV standards.

    Slideshow: Republican National Convention

    Evan Vucci / AP

    Republicans gather in Tampa, Florida to officially nominate Mitt Romney and his running mate, Paul Ryan, as the party's candidates for the 2012 presidential election.

    Launch slideshow

    For those who couldn’t stay awake, Chalmers Roberts of The Washington Post summed it up: “A rousing speech, delivered with fervor as well as verve.” To Democrats angry about President Richard Nixon continuing the war in Vietnam, McGovern pledged, “I will halt the senseless bombing of Indochina on Inauguration Day.” He never got the chance, going down in a landslide defeat that November.

    Populist and homey
    In New York in 1992, Bill Clinton delivered his acceptance speech just hours after Ross Perot said he was withdrawing from the presidential race, a decision Perot later reversed. Clinton appealed to Perot voters to join the Democrats and then uncorked a smoothly delivered populist appeal with themes much like those of Mondale in 1984.

    "I was raised to believe that the American Dream was built on rewarding hard work," he said. "But folks in Washington have turned that American ethic on its head. For too long, those who play by the rules and keep the faith have gotten the shaft. And those who cut corners and cut deals have been rewarded."

    Clinton said of his opponent George H.W. Bush, "He raised taxes on the people who drive pick-up trucks and lowered taxes on people who ride in limousines."

    He concluded with a personal touch about the Arkansas town where he grew up -- and the line most people today remember: "I end tonight where it all began for me," he said. "I still believe in a place called Hope."

    The gesture, more than the words
    You may not remember many of the phrases in 2004 Democratic nominee John Kerry’s convention speech, but you probably do recall how he began that speech -- coming out, saluting to the crowd, and declaring, “I'm John Kerry, and I'm reporting for duty.”

    The theme of Kerry’s campaign against President George W. Bush was that Kerry’s national security credentials were impeccable because he’d served in the Navy during the Vietnam War. As a combat veteran he would cede nothing to Bush on patriotism.

    “As president, I will wage this war with the lessons I learned in war,” he said, as he pledged to “bring our allies to our side and share the burden” and “reduce the risk to American soldiers. That's the right way to get the job done and bring our troops home.”

    Not memorable but no matter …
    Then there are those acceptance speeches which in the end aren’t that memorable -- but don’t matter because the challenger scores his rhetorical victory in a fall debate.

    Reagan’s acceptance speech at the 1980 GOP convention isn’t remembered today as one of his greatest. It did what you’d expect -- it challenged the incumbent president Jimmy Carter and his record.

    He asked, ''Can anyone compare the state of our economy when the Carter administration took office with where we are today and say, 'Keep up the good work?' Can anyone look at our reduced standing in the world today and say, 'Let's have four more years of this?' ''

    More decisive was the side-by-side comparison of the self-assured Reagan with his dour opponent in the sole debate the two men had one week before the election.

    77 comments

    What is unforgettable about this creep is his repeated lies. He used the closing of a GM plant during Dubbies reign to attack Obama! To the Republican base he looks intelligent and to the rest of us he looks like a stupid liar. LOL

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  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    4:31pm, EDT

    Explore the Republican National Convention in 360 degrees

    As the Republican National Convention in Tampa builds to its final night and its most anticipated speaker Mitt Romney, take a spin through an interactive image, below, of the the Tampa Bay Times Forum where the events are being held. (Editor's note: This image was created by stitching multiple pictures together)

    A view from the 3rd floor of the Tampa Bay Times Forum, taken between shows at the CNBC booth, one of many news studios ringing the floor. (John Brecher / NBCNews.com)

    Workers, delegates, journalists and others mix and mingle as they pass through the hallway surrounding level 3 of the Tampa Bay Times Forum, site of the RNC. (John Brecher / NBCNews.com)

    See more visual stories from the RNC in PhotoBlog, and NBC's full coverage of the event.

    Slideshow: 2012 Republican National Convention

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    27 comments

    360 degrees of racist, bible thumping, gun toting, homophobic, trailer trash.

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  • 30
    Aug
    2012
    3:57pm, EDT

    Clint Eastwood confirmed as RNC surprise guest

    By Amanda Grace Johnson, NBC News

    Actor and director Clint Eastwood has been confirmed as a surprise guest Thursday night at the Republican National Convention.

    Frazer Harrison / Getty Images

    Director/actor Clint Eastwood accepts the award for Distinguished Collaborator onstage during the 14th Annual Costume Designers Guild Awards With Presenting Sponsor Lacoste held at The Beverly Hilton hotel on February 21, 2012 in Beverly Hills, Calif.

    Eastwood recently thrust his support behind GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney, who will receive his official nomination at the convention tonight.

    Earlier this year, a Chrysler ad narrated by Eastwood that aired during the Super Bowl appeared to endorse President Barack Obama, prompting the actor to respond that he was not backing either candidate. He then went on to voice his support for Romney earlier this month at a fundraiser in Idaho. 

    Eastwood will address the convention Thursday night in Tampa, Fla., before Romney accepts his nomination. Romney will be introduced by Florida Sen. Marco Rubio.

    NBC's Kelly O'Donnell and Sue Kroll contributed to this story.

    958 comments

    That doesn't make my day!

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Phaedra Singelis

is a Supervising Producer at NBC News.com Previously she worked as an editor at the New York Times and the Washington Post in addition to working as a photojournalist at numerous newspapers.

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