TY - JOUR
T1 - The Informational Consequences of Populism
T2 - Social Media News Use and “News Finds Me” Perception
AU - González-González, Pablo
AU - Marcos-Marné, Hugo
AU - Llamazares, Iván
AU - de Zúñiga, Homero Gil
N1 - Funding Information:
Late stages of this work at the Democracy Research Unit (DRU) have benefited from the support of the Spanish National Research Agency’s Program for the Generation of Knowledge and the Scientific and Technological Strengthening Research A? Development Grant PID2020‐ 115562GB‐I00. Responsibility for the information and views set out in this study lies entirely with the authors. The last author is funded by the “Beatriz Galindo Program” from the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation & Universities, and the Junta de Castilla y León.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by the author(s); licensee Cogitatio (Lisbon, Portugal).
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Prior studies have theorized a positive association between people’s populist attitudes and an increased use of social media to consume news, which will be mainly driven by individuals’ engagement with news that reflects their people-centered, anti-elitist, and Manichean understanding of politics. However, such general connection remains elusive. This research seeks to further clarify this strand of the literature by incorporating people’s belief that important political information will find them without actively seeking news—”News Finds Me” perception (NFM). For that, we use online survey data from two European countries that differ regarding the ideological political supply side of populism (Italy and Portugal). The main results suggest that citizens who hold stronger populist attitudes will also develop stronger NFM. Furthermore, findings reveal a mediating effect of social media news use on the effects of populist attitudes over NFM. That is, those who hold stronger populist attitudes tend to use social media to get exposed to public affairs news more often, which in turn explains the development of the NFM. These results emphasize the importance of systematically exploring citizens populists’ attitudes within today’s social media, social networks, and complex information systems.
AB - Prior studies have theorized a positive association between people’s populist attitudes and an increased use of social media to consume news, which will be mainly driven by individuals’ engagement with news that reflects their people-centered, anti-elitist, and Manichean understanding of politics. However, such general connection remains elusive. This research seeks to further clarify this strand of the literature by incorporating people’s belief that important political information will find them without actively seeking news—”News Finds Me” perception (NFM). For that, we use online survey data from two European countries that differ regarding the ideological political supply side of populism (Italy and Portugal). The main results suggest that citizens who hold stronger populist attitudes will also develop stronger NFM. Furthermore, findings reveal a mediating effect of social media news use on the effects of populist attitudes over NFM. That is, those who hold stronger populist attitudes tend to use social media to get exposed to public affairs news more often, which in turn explains the development of the NFM. These results emphasize the importance of systematically exploring citizens populists’ attitudes within today’s social media, social networks, and complex information systems.
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U2 - 10.17645/pag.v10i1.4772
DO - 10.17645/pag.v10i1.4772
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85124714709
SN - 2183-2463
VL - 10
SP - 197
EP - 209
JO - Politics and Governance
JF - Politics and Governance
IS - 1
ER -