Negative campaigning has long concerned scholars because of the potential effects on the electorate and on democracy. Most scholarship has focused on single-election studies in the United States, whereas less is known about how campaigns go on the attack in the UK, and few compare two elections. Drawing from a dataset of Facebook posts by parties and leaders in Great Britain during the five weeks of campaigning in the 2017 and 2019 General Elections (N = 3560), we use supervised machine learning to categorise posts as negative campaigning and distinguish between attacks focused on issues and attacks on candidates’ images. Our findings show that the 2019 election was more negative than in 2017, and that larger parties were more inclined to ...
Based on the dual trend of more women running for office and campaigns becoming more negative, we ca...
From Twitter to the BBC, media platforms were perceived as having had ‘a bad election’. The story of...
This article presents an empirical study of young partisans’ and non-voters’ processing of attack ad...
Focusing on the 2019 European Parliament campaign, we investigate parties’ engagement in negative ca...
International audienceRelating to theories of dissonant public spheres and affective publics, we stu...
Social media has become an essential platform in the field of digital political communication. In th...
What drives British parliamentary candidates to attack their opponents? Using an original dataset of...
Little comparative evidence exists about what causes candidates to use negative campaigning in elect...
This study focuses on how people respond to viewing negative tweets by politicians about their oppon...
Political actors are increasingly curating their own audiences via social media, communicating direc...
Which candidates are more likely to go negative, and under which conditions? We analyze self-reporte...
This thesis examines the issue of negative political advertising on social media in the United State...
The 2019 UK general election took place against a background of rising online hostility levels towar...
During the 2015 UK General Election the main political parties used social media as a main battlefie...
Based on the dual trend of more women running for office and campaigns becoming more negative, we ca...
Based on the dual trend of more women running for office and campaigns becoming more negative, we ca...
From Twitter to the BBC, media platforms were perceived as having had ‘a bad election’. The story of...
This article presents an empirical study of young partisans’ and non-voters’ processing of attack ad...
Focusing on the 2019 European Parliament campaign, we investigate parties’ engagement in negative ca...
International audienceRelating to theories of dissonant public spheres and affective publics, we stu...
Social media has become an essential platform in the field of digital political communication. In th...
What drives British parliamentary candidates to attack their opponents? Using an original dataset of...
Little comparative evidence exists about what causes candidates to use negative campaigning in elect...
This study focuses on how people respond to viewing negative tweets by politicians about their oppon...
Political actors are increasingly curating their own audiences via social media, communicating direc...
Which candidates are more likely to go negative, and under which conditions? We analyze self-reporte...
This thesis examines the issue of negative political advertising on social media in the United State...
The 2019 UK general election took place against a background of rising online hostility levels towar...
During the 2015 UK General Election the main political parties used social media as a main battlefie...
Based on the dual trend of more women running for office and campaigns becoming more negative, we ca...
Based on the dual trend of more women running for office and campaigns becoming more negative, we ca...
From Twitter to the BBC, media platforms were perceived as having had ‘a bad election’. The story of...
This article presents an empirical study of young partisans’ and non-voters’ processing of attack ad...