Abstract

Contemporary democracies are increasingly shaped by a surge of populism, posing serious threats to the idea of liberal democracy. Particularly in the run-up to elections, knowledge of such threats is essential for citizens to cast an informed vote. Against this background, the present study examined the likelihood of media users to engage with political news providing critical perspectives on populist movements in a 24-hour social media field experiment during the 2017 federal election campaign in Germany (<em>N</em> = 210). Based on two selective exposure measures, findings suggest that exposure to critical news is contingent upon the conceptualization of populist partisanship as a political orientation of either high commitment (i.e., voting intention) or high affinity (i.e., sympathy for a party). While high commitment triggered a rather classic confirmation bias, especially regarding click decisions, high affinity caused selection patterns to be more strongly guided by informational utility, particularly during newsfeed browsing, with counter-attitudinal information receiving more attention. When public sentiment cues were present, however, attitudinal patterns disappeared. These findings imply that partisan news use in times of political upheaval is best gauged by taking a closer look at the particular type of partisanship that guides selective exposure, as both types of partisanship caused contrary exposure patterns, and that today’s news environments potentially override attitudinal influences by providing additional social monitoring cues.

Highlights

  • In the run-up to elections, political news about the incumbent government and the political opposition help citizens cast an informed vote by providing clues on how to evaluate the government’s past performance compared to competing party agendas

  • The present study investigates selective exposure to critical-analytical news on populism in a 24-hour social media field experiment during the 2017 federal election campaign in Germany, characterized by a surge of the right-wing populist party AfD

  • To address the hypotheses and research questions, the present study examined partisan selective exposure to critical news posts on populism in a 24-hour social media field experiment during the 2017 federal election campaign in Germany

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Summary

Introduction

In the run-up to elections, political news about the incumbent government and the political opposition help citizens cast an informed vote by providing clues on how to evaluate the government’s past performance compared to competing party agendas. In times of disputed journalistic credibility in the wake of political polarization (Hanitzsch, Van Dalen, & Steindl, 2018) and a diminishing public demand for journalistic news (Dahlgren, 2019), it remains an open question whether critical-analytical journalism is able to reach the public and, contribute to enhanced public awareness of populist threats, especially when news consumption is more commonly taking place in social, high-choice media environments Against this background, the present study investigates selective exposure to critical-analytical news on populism in a 24-hour social media field experiment during the 2017 federal election campaign in Germany, characterized by a surge of the right-wing populist party AfD. Based on an experimental design of high ecological validity, selective exposure will be examined—both as visibility time of posts in participants’ newsfeeds and the number of posts participants clicked on—with regards to two main drivers of news exposure in times of political and technological upheaval, namely partisanship and public sentiment cues

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