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Photo of president, first lady is social-media sensation

Posted at 1:24 PM, Nov 07, 2012
and last updated 2012-11-07 13:24:54-05

By Brandon Griggs and Dorrine Mendoza, CNN

(CNN) – It may already be social media’s most-shared image ever.

President Barack Obama’s campaign posted a photograph of him embracing his wife, first lady Michelle Obama, to Facebook and Twitter late Tuesday, moments after CNN and other news outlets projected he had won re-election over GOP challenger Mitt Romney. The accompanying message read simply, “Four more years.”

The president had tweeted a thank-you message to supporters from the same account moments earlier. But it was the image that captured the world’s imagination.

By late Wednesday morning the photo had been retweeted more than 675,000 times, topping a previous tweet by pop star Justin Bieber and making it the most popular message in Twitter’s brief history.

It also has received more than 400,000 shares and 3.3 million likes on Facebook, shattering the previous record held by Mark Zuckerberg’s wedding photo in May.

The image shows the president and first lady locked in a heartfelt embrace, framed against a cloudy sky. She’s wearing a sleeveless summer dress; he’s got his shirt sleeves rolled up and his eyes closed, a smile on his face. It was taken August 15 at an Obama rally in Dubuque, Iowa, during a three-day campaign bus tour across the state.

More than 160,000 commenters weighed in about Obama’s post on Facebook. Amid the congratulations and the angry posts from Romney supporters were some praising the photo.

“They are an absolutely gorgeous couple!!! So in love!” said one comment.

The posts reaffirmed the pre-eminence of social media as a crucial communications platform in the 2012 presidential race. Obama’s campaign acknowledged his victory on Twitter and Facebook before he e-mailed supporters or addressed a victory rally early Wednesday in Chicago.

The Obama campaign has not revealed who took the photo, although it is nearly identical to ones snapped by Jim Watson, who covered the campaign event for Agence France-Presse.