Republican presidential hopeful Donald Trump. PHOTO | AFP
By REUTERS
In Summary
- Outside of the United States, the topic "Donald Trump" and "Muslims" were searched the most in Kenya, Panama and Puerto Rico, according to Google Trends.
- More typically, hashtags most popularly associated with Trump are #Trump, #Trump2016, #DonaldTrump and #MakeAmericaGreatAgain, according to online research firm Hashtagify.me.
Republican presidential contender Donald Trump's
demand that the U.S. stop allowing Muslims into the United States lit up
social media on Tuesday, as critics of the proposal around the world
took to Twitter and Facebook to express their outrage.
Outside of the United States, the topic "Donald Trump" and
"Muslims" were searched the most in Kenya, Panama and Puerto Rico,
according to Google Trends.
Outside of the United States, there were about 4.2
negative mentions for every positive one on social media regarding
Trump, according to data provided by Zoomph, an analytics platform that
tracks and aggregates social media mentions. Within the country, there
were about 3.2 negative mentions per a single positive mention.
Sentiment toward the outspoken billionaire
candidate on Twitter fell sharply, Thomson Reuters data showed, down to
negative 12.3 from an average of about negative 5 before his proposal
regarding Muslims on Monday afternoon.
Muslims in Pakistan and Indonesia, denounced Trump's call for the ban, dismissing him as a bigot who promoted violence.
In Indonesia, home to the world's largest Muslim
population, Twitter user @aulia, said: "Donald Trump has made America
dangerous. He doesn't need to win to turn the US into Nazi Germany."
In Europe, a Twitter user identified as @frauke1983
wrote: "Let's say Donald Trump is not allowed to travel to Europe ...
forever"
In the United States, just five states accounted
for more than half the American Twitter traffic on Trump, according to
Keyhole, a real-time social media analytics tool. The biggest buzz came
from New York state, home of one of the largest Muslim populations in
the country and the origin of 15 percent of all mentions of Trump.
California followed with 14 percent of the volume,
while Texas grabbed the No. 3 spot with 12 percent. Virginia and
Georgia, at 5 percent each, rounded out the top five states.
Worldwide, U.S. mentions of Trump accounted for 58
percent of the total, with Canada a distant second with 5 percent and
Germany at No. 3 with 4 percent.
The Republican presidential front-runner's proposal
prompted a torrent of criticism from both Democratic and Republican
presidential candidates, the White House, senior Obama administration
officials and congressional leaders that continued on Tuesday.
On Twitter, the most popular hashtags associated
with the outspoken billionaire candidate following his proposal were
#TrumpisnotmyAmerica and #DontVoteTrump.
Not the first time
More typically, hashtags most popularly associated
with Trump are #Trump, #Trump2016, #DonaldTrump and
#MakeAmericaGreatAgain, according to online research firm Hashtagify.me.
This was not the first time Trump has made
controversial comments during his campaign. But it was the most dramatic
response by a candidate yet to last week's shooting spree in San
Bernardino by two Muslims who the FBI said had been radicalized.
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