Abstract

Democratic systems need some degree of openness to new ideas and to new competitors. New parties depend on news media to survive. Which new parties receive news media coverage, and what kind of coverage do these parties receive? This article brings in the media into the literature of new parties. Based on two original datasets compiled for this study, the news media coverage of dozens of parties in a variety of offline and online news media sources since 1947 is analyzed to address the two research questions. In terms of visibility, new parties receive more attention when already represented in parliament and when mobilizing on the main axis of political contestation. In terms of framing, new parties are hardly ever trivialized, stigmatized, or criminalized. Compared to established parties, new parties are more trivialized, just as little criminalized, and even less stigmatized. Our findings put complaints about the media by new party leaders into perspective, and let political and media practitioners reflect on their practices, inform debates about interactions between news media and new voices. They may also open new lines of research about political transformations that we witness in Western democracies today.

Highlights

  • Democratic systems need some degree of openness to new ideas and to new competitors

  • Analogous to the general incumbency bonus argument, we argue that obtaining the power associated with national parliamentary representation will increase a new party’s media visibility

  • The exponentiated coefficient is 2.95, which indicates that new parties that already have a presence in parliament have an expected visibility of 2.95 times the visibility of new parties that are not already in parliament

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Summary

Introduction

Democratic systems need some degree of openness to new ideas and to new competitors. New parties depend on news media to survive. Notwithstanding the extensive literature on new parties in established democracies, their media visibility and framing has remained largely unexplored. Both when election news coverage follows party logic and when it follows media logic, the focus will be on political parties with a particular power position (see, for example, Brants and Van Praag, 2006).

Results
Conclusion

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