Moggmentum

Hon. Jacob Rees-Mogg

Moggmentum is an online campaign and grassroots movement celebrating Jacob Rees-Mogg in a similar fashion to the 2015 phenomenon of Milifandom and Labour's Momentum. The campaign includes pressure for him to become the Conservative Party leader in the United Kingdom. The #Moggmentum movement has been seen as the first steps for the Conservative Party on social media.

The group Moggmentum was established in June 2017.

History


In May 2017, During the 2017 election campaign Rees-Mogg posted a picture on Instagram of himself and his son standing outside a tattoo parlour that was displaying a Vote Labour poster alongside a poster reading "Keep sane and don't vote Tory", his picture was captioned: "We shall have to take our business elsewhere".[1][2] As a result #Moggmentum began to trend on Twitter.

In June 2017 #Moggmentum began to trend again as a result of Rees-Mogg interrupting Jeremy Corbyn during the queen's speech debate, an act that was criticised by Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow.[3] Following the speech a series of memes were created with Rees-Mogg as the subject.[4] A petition was started to make Rees-Mogg Prime Minister which gained 13,000 signatures over the next two days.[5] The news site Breitbart London, which is especially popular with conservative grassroots in the online sphere, was the first major media to back Moggmentum in late June by publicising the petition[6] and publishing the first serious "case for Prime Minister Rees-Mogg" article, hence providing substance to the social media driven movement.[7]

On the 7 July 2017 Jacob Rees-Mogg gained significant publicity as the potential next Conservative Party leader when major news outlets began releasing articles about the subject, at the time Rees-Mogg had an opinion polling of 60% to take over as conservative party leader according to Pollstation[8] with Boris Johnson following with 12% of the votes. The same day betting odds were "slashed" from 50/1 to 16/1 on Oddschecker; this has been directly attributed to the campaign.[9][10]

Responses

On 3 July 2017, the BBC released a trending subject article on the movement and on the 5 July a two minute video was added to the BBC website summarising the phenomenon.[11][12]

References

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