Abstract
ABSTRACT The news media use the logic of us-versus-them divide in covering politics and religion, but this case alone is insufficient a precondition to label the media as populist. Rather, it is the extensive and unchallenged accounts of official sources including populist politicians that reinforce the pro-populist tendency of media. The article examines the way the news media outlets cover the rhetorical exchanges between the Rodrigo Duterte administration and the church especially the Catholic Church in the Philippines. Based on textual analysis of news articles, the narratives of politics and religion are presented: “hypocritical church” mainstreams the conflict-centered pronouncements of the political leader against the church, “political church” covers the anti-populist but also the nostalgic oratory of the Catholic Church, and “alternative voice” underscores the views of faith-based formations on the fringe of dominant media sources. The narratives of politics and religion matter to the contentious relationship between journalism and democracy as they characterize the capability of news media to amplify, interrogate, and defy populist politics.
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