Abstract

Does national media news coverage affect the behavior of legislators when deciding foreign policy matters? This article aims to disentangle the relationship between the media and legislative behavior in foreign policy, using Paraguay as a case study. We analyze the level of public debate on international affairs, measured by the frequency of news in the newspaper ABC Color in the six months before the roll-call votes on the Chamber of Deputies of Paraguay. The literature on Latin American studies finds a lack of parliamentary interest in foreign affairs due to low voter attention to this subject, and therefore a low impact on reelections. We find the relationship between parliamentary polarization and public interest in a bill to be mediated by mass media. After estimating a Tobit model, we observe a significant and positive relationship between the news coverage a law receives and the degree of polarization among parliamentarians. Thus, our empirical evidence contradicts the idea that there is a lack of electoral interest in foreign policy. We confirm this finding through qualitative data gathered from in-depth interviews.

Highlights

  • We live in times in which politicians accuse the media of manipulating public opinion and the media accuse politicians of not telling the truth

  • Legislative votes in foreign policy are structured around the dichotomy of government and opposition

  • The content covered by the mass media, in this case, the newspaper with the largest circulation in Paraguay, influences the individual’s opinions regarding their country’s foreign policy

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Summary

Introduction

We live in times in which politicians accuse the media of manipulating public opinion and the media accuse politicians of not telling the truth. The dissemination of news plays a crucial role in representative democracy by establishing a connection between elected representatives and electorate This connection applies to the executive power; increasingly, legislators and judges are becoming involved in news scandals that shock public opinion. López, and Urdinez: Legislative Behavior, Mass Media, and Foreign Policy different incentives to legislative behavior (McCormick and Wittkopf 1990; Fleisher et al 2000; Kupchan and Trubowitz 2007) This includes matters such as domestic economy, education, health, and public safety, which are all present in the daily life of the voter; foreign policy matters rarely involve personal experience (Soroka 2003). Understanding the relationship between media coverage and legislative behavior allows us to evaluate the quality of democratic representation in foreign policy making

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