Abstract

Abstract Over the last few years, in an attempt to mitigate parties' unequal access to mass media during election campaigns, several Latin American countries decided to increase the public funding of election campaigns vis-a-vis private sources. Among them, four countries (Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, and Ecuador) moved to an exclusively state-funded regime of mass media election campaigns. Argentine legislation was first implemented for the 2011 presidential elections. According to new campaign finance legislation, among other changes, the buying and selling of electoral advertisements on radio and TV are prohibited. Parties and candidates may only use advertising allocated by the state to disseminate their campaign messages. Based on a large media monitoring scheme conducted during open primaries and general elections, this article presents an evaluation of the first implementation of this new law in Argentina. In all, approximately 7,000 election ads on radio and TV were recorded and analyzed. The data s...

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