This is a reminder that it's a mistake to poll your twitter followers and then write about the results as if they were an accurate indicator of where general public opinion stands (or even the opinion of some large subset of the population).
I've seen so many of these that have gone viral.
Your Twitter followers (and mine) are almost certainly not a representative sample of the population. See following points for explanation of why.
The people who follow you are disproportionately likely to share your political views (especially if you Tweet about political issues), and perhaps your other interests.
People who are active on Twitter are disproportionately white, young, highly educated, affluent, left-wing, and male, among other characteristics. All of this is likely to skew your results.
The people who participate in the poll probably aren't even representative of your followers. They are likely to be disproportionately those who care most about the issue the question asks about, and those who follow you and your posts most closely. If I took a poll of my Twitter followers, there would probably be overwhelming support among respondents for such views as legalizing organ markets, shutting down ICE, and abolishing the entire War on Drugs. Doesn't mean the general public agrees - or even that this accurately represents the full set of my followers.
Many Twitter poll questions are just poorly designed, as most people underestimate how hard it is to write a good survey question (or simply are incapable of doing so at all). If you lack such expertise yourself, there's a good chance your Twitter poll question is badly worded, and therefore doesn't even accurately measure the views of those who do participate!
It's fine to do these polls if you want to. Just don't pass them off as providing accurate insight on what the general public believes. And be careful about assuming that they accurately represent even what your followers think.