Politicians in France are getting increasingly competitive about their use of Twitter, the social network messaging site, and the number of followers they can attract.

"/> Politicians in France are getting increasingly competitive about their use of Twitter, the social network messaging site, and the number of followers they can attract.

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French politicians fall in love with tweeting

Politicians in France are getting increasingly competitive about their use of Twitter, the social network messaging site, and the number of followers they can attract.

French politicians fall in love with tweeting
Top tweeting environment minister Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet by Adam Tinworth

A top ten list of tweeting politicians shows an even political split, with four from the governing UMP party, four from the opposition Socialists, one Green and one centrist politician. 

Top of the tweeting charts is 38-year old environment minister Nathalie Kosciusko-Morizet, who had a total of 102,360 followers on Wednesday morning.

Kosciusko-Morizet, known as @nk_m on Twitter, likes to tweet several times a day but tends to keep her messages work-related.

A fellow government minister, Nadine Morano, has openly challenged her lead.

The outspoken Nadine Morano (@nadine_morano) has taken to Twitter with a series of provocative and controversial tweets over recent months in an effort to topple her colleague. She managed 59 tweets on Christmas day alone.

She had 12,228 followers on Wednesday morning but joked with daily newspaper Le Parisien that “I’m getting several hundred each day – I’m on my way!”

Taking a cue from the president of the US, she added “Obama has 12 million. That doesn’t scare me.” She has even offered to take her 10,000th follower, a man named Julien, out for a coffee.

Recent tweets have included an attack on opposition Socialist presidential candidate François Hollande (@fhollande) about his lack of ministerial experience: “Never chosen to be a minister and now president” (“Jamais il n’a été choisi pour être ministre, alors president.”)

Morano has also been in the news after she used Twitter to attack the puppet of her used on satirical TV show Les Guignols de l’Info. 

“I dream, like everyone I meet, to see these pretentious Parisian bobos [bourgeois bohemians]” she tweeted.

Other politicians to have made the news on Twitter this year include industry minister Eric Besson (@Eric_Besson) who mistakenly sent a flirtatious private tweet to all his followers. The tweet said “I’m going to bed when I get home. So exhausted. With you?”

The incident saw a big jump in the number of his followers.

Even prime minister François Fillon has been getting in on the act. It was revealed earlier in December that he had created an account (@fdebeauce) just so he could keep an eye on his tweeting ministers and political rivals.

President Nicolas Sarkozy has so far ignored the call of the 140-character messaging network, although with a tough election approaching it may not be surprising if he soon jumps on board.

Top ten tweeting French politicians (follower numbers on 28th December)

Nathalie Kosicusko-Morizet (@nk_m) 102,360

François Hollande (@fhollande) 81,743

Benoît Hamon (@benoithamon) 80,804

Laurent Wauquiez (@laurentwauquiez) 59,004

Cécile Duflot (@cecileduflot) 39,908

Arnaud Montebourg (@montebourg) 36,812

François Bayrou (@bayrou) 36,225

Martine Aubry (@martineaubry) 35,208

Eric Besson (@eric_besson) 34,047

Valérie Pécresse (@vpecresse) 31,482

 

twitter.com/matthew_warren (just 100 followers)

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DISCRIMINATION

Twitter appeals French court ruling on hate speech transparency

Twitter has appealed a French court decision that ordered it to give activists full access to all of its relevant documents on efforts to fight hate speech, lawyers and a judicial source said on Saturday.

Twitter appeals French court ruling on hate speech transparency
The Twitter logo is seen on a phone. Twitter has appealed a French court judgement requiring it to share documents with activist groups. Photo: Alastair Pike / AFP

In July, a French court ordered Twitter to grant six French anti-discrimination groups full access to all documents relating to the
company’s efforts to combat hate speech since May 2020. The ruling applied to Twitter’s global operation, not just France.

Twitter has appealed the decision and a hearing has been set for December 9, 2021, a judicial source told AFP, confirming information released by the groups’ lawyers.

Twitter and its lawyers declined to comment.

The July order said that Twitter must hand over “all administrative, contractual, technical or commercial documents” detailing the resources it has assigned to fight homophobic, racist and sexist discourse on the site, as well as the offence of “condoning crimes against humanity”.

It also said Twitter must reveal how many moderators it employs in France to examine posts flagged as hateful, and data on the posts they process.

READ ALSO: French court orders Twitter to change smallprint over ‘abusive’ methods

The July ruling gave the San Francisco-based company two months to comply. Twitter can ask for a suspension pending the appeal.

The six anti-discrimination groups had taken Twitter to court in France last year, accusing the US social media giant of “long-term and persistent” failures in blocking hateful comments from the site.

The groups campaign against homophobia, racism and anti-Semitism. Twitter’s hateful conduct policy bans users from promoting violence or threatening or attacking people based on their race, religion, gender identity or disability, among other forms of discrimination.

Like other social media giants it allows users to report posts they believe are hateful, and employs moderators to vet the content.

But anti-discrimination groups have long complained that holes in the policy allow hateful comments to stay online in many cases.

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