From: "Darrell West" <dw...@brookings.edu>
Date: Jan 17, 2018 6:48 AM
Subject: What Search Data Tell Us About Trump's First Year

At the end of Donald Trump’s first year, it is time to assess his
presidency using search data. Much of the traditional analysis has
emphasized polls, election results, and legislation. All of these are
useful ways to analyze, but they ignore big data analytics based on digital
tools and social media behavior. Due to their real-time character and the
large number of data points, these techniques represent valuable means to
examine contemporary behavior. In my report at https://www.brookings.edu/
research/what-internet-search-data-reveal-about-donald-
trumps-first-year-in-office/, I inaugurate the first in a series of big
data analyses that will chart long-term trends in public interest. In the
same way that researchers track political, economic, and social activities,
it is useful to deploy social media and event histories to identify
patterns in internet search behavior regarding President Trump.



Using this information, I find several important developments:

1) Public interest in Trump has plummeted over the course of 2017. After
peaking during inauguration week, searches for him have dropped to 20
percent of the initial level as the public has soured on the chief
executive.

2) There were variations in interest in economic, domestic, and foreign
policy, depending on the time of year. Interest in health care peaked
during the period of the summer when Congress attempted but failed to
repeal Obamacare. There also were spikes in interest in North Korea,
terrorism, taxes, and inequality as those topics were in the news.

3) There were significant differences across states and cities in public
interest as various topics surfaced nationally. Variations based on
geography reveal interesting things in terms of how different issues
resonate in various parts of the country.

4) Impeachment interest has surged during Trump’s first year. In May and
November, there were major spikes in public interest in that topic as Trump
fired FBI Director James Comey in May and saw leading advisors face federal
indictment in November.



*Darrell West*

*VP, Governance Studies*

*Director, Center for Technology Innovation*

*Douglas Dillon Chair in Governance Studies*

*Brookings Institution*

*1755 Massachusetts Avenue NW
<https://maps.google.com/?q=1755+Massachusetts+Avenue+NW%0D+*Washington,+DC+20036*&entry=gmail&source=g>*

*Washington, DC 20036
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*Phone:  202-797-6481 <(202)%20797-6481>*

*Website: **www.InsidePolitics.org* <http://www.InsidePolitics.org>

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