The hype surrounding the US presidential election in 2020 is growing palpable, and one candidate, Andrew Yang, is getting significant attention from the cryptocurrency community.
Yang, of the Democratic Party, is absolutely the favorite of internet memelords, but he isnât the only one appealing to the blockchain crowd.
Hard Fork investigated the Twitter feeds of every confirmed presidential candidate (as well as a few rumored ones) to figure out who the cryptocurrency community prefers most.
Andrew Yang is winning over âCrypto Twitterâ
Our analysis reviewed tweets from an exhaustive list of potentials (from Trump, to Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Tulsi Gabbard â even Kanye West.)
Apart from Kanyeâs infamous âdecentralizeâ message, the data shows only three individuals have mentioned cryptocurrency or blockchain tech in some way: Andrew Yang, John Delaney, and John Kasich.
Focusing purely on tweets related to blockchain and cryptocurrency, Yang has garnered 75 percent of the interaction total, proving his effectiveness at capturing the attention of decentralized tech fans.
Most notably, Yang found traction when he opened his campaign to accept donations via Bitcoin, Ethereum, and a handful of other digital assets in July last year.
The move came in tandem with a message directly addressing the cryptocurrency community, sent during an âAsk Me Anythingâ Facebook session.
In it, Yang declared himself a fan of blockchainâs âunderlying technology,â and said cryptocurrency could be critical in creating a âdigital-social currency.â
Yang Bucks are gonna pump Bitcoin, so letâs get this bag
The cornerstone of Yangâs appeal with the Bitcoin crowd is an apparent shared belief in the concept of âUniversal Basic Income,â which (in this case) involves the government distributing $1,000 every month to each US citizen over the age of 18.
Yang explained this vision during a recent appearance on the wildly popular Joe Rogan Experience (JRE) podcast. The effect this had on Yangâs exposure shouldnât be understated.
This is a chart of Yangâs Twitter following over the past year. After Yangâs JRE debut on February 12, his count more than tripled, from below 50,000 to over 188,000 today.
While âYang Gangersâ are not exclusively cryptocurrency fans, Bitcoiners have been quite receptive of Yangâs plan to regularly hand out free bags of money.
A popular idea is to potentially spend the free âYang Bucksâ on Bitcoin, in hope of pumping its price (which would make them even richer.)
âAmateur economistsâ have even made a handy infographic displaying how Yang Bucks (in combination with Bitcoin) are poised to fuel a self-sustaining economy thatâs supposed to protect against âAI & robots & shit.â
Hereâs what Delaney and Kasich have to say about blockchain
The presidential buzz in crypto-circles is not all about Yang (just most of it). Delaney, another Democratic candidate, has recently tweeted about blockchain twice, both times with official-sounding rhetoric.
âChair Giancarloâs speech at the DC Blockchain Summit sponsored by the Chamber of Digital Commerce highlights the need for tech-forward regulatory solutions,â wrote Delaney. âWe want savvy leaders guiding the country on blockchain.â
He backed those comments a few days later, when he described the blockchain communityâs innovation as âinspirational.â
The true crypto-wildcard is John Kasich. Towards the end of 2018, Ohioâs former governor tweeted an article from a local news source that described blockchain technology as âInternet 10.0.â (For reference, the rest of the blockchain industry is still stuck in âWeb 3.0.â)
Regardless, neither Kasich or Delaney have enjoyed as much engagement as Yang. While there have been efforts to squeeze âblockchainâ into social media feeds, Yang is the only one to find true success by discussing decentralization.
Seriously, Yang almost hit 300,000 Twitter interactions last month, while Kasich and Delaney currently average just 21,000.
Cryptocurrency celebs among prominent #YangGang influencers
Using social monitoring tool CrowdTangle, Hard Fork also looked into the most prominent âYang Gang influencers.â
By analyzing tweets with #YangGang and #YangGang2020 hashtags, weâve ranked authors by interaction volume (their influence).
Whistleblowing non-profit WikiLeaks is the sixth biggest Yang Gang influencer (not counting Yang), having earned over 4,200 interactions with Yang-infused tweets.
Did Trump just lose the 2020 meme war? Memers flock to @andrewYangVFA's campaign centered around AI mass job loss requiring universal basic income (UBI) after mentions on @JoeRogan and @WikiLeaks. See #Yanggang and #yanggang2020 for thousands of examples. pic.twitter.com/n7vxeMN4l2
â WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) March 8, 2019
There is also a surprising number of established âcrypto-celebsâ amongst the top 100. Indeed, our data suggests blockchain think-tanker Neeraj Agrawal is the 42nd most visible Yang Gang influencer, having earned over 400 interactions with hashtagged tweets.
Popular cryptocurrency personality âBullyâ came a few positions later (number 47), and even the ever-infamous Kevin Pham appeared on the exclusive list (heâs number 72).
Nic Carter, public blockchain investor, was number 86. We detected he received 92 interactions across a pair of choice tweets. Lawyer-slash-cryptocurrency pundit Jake Chervinsky just made the cut at number 95.
Perhaps the coolest find, though, was that Yangâs interest in Bitcoin is not recent. He actually tweeted about Bitcoin way back in 2013, when the worldâs most popular digital asset was four years old.
âI sense the bitcoin [sic] price correction will make some Fellows [sic] nervous,â he wrote, referencing an article that detailed a sudden drop in Bitcoin price (from $1,079 to $576.)
The 2020 elections are still a year-and-a-half away, but consider that Yangâs rise in popularity was incredibly sudden (and super hilarious). With so long left in the race, itâs probable the Yang Gang is yet to reach its final form, but itâs definitely wising up to its potential.
#YangGang2020
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