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Beyond 'fake news'? A longitudinal analysis of how Australian politicians attack and criticise the media on Twitter.

Wright, S., 2021. Beyond 'fake news'? A longitudinal analysis of how Australian politicians attack and criticise the media on Twitter. Journal of Language and Politics, 20 (5), 719-740.

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DOI: 10.1075/jlp.21027.wri

Abstract

This article longitudinally analyses how Australian politicians engage with, and attack, journalists and the media more generally on Twitter from 2011-2018. The article finds that attacks on journalists have increased significantly since 2016 when Trump came to power, but this is largely the preserve of populist and far-right politicians. These politicians rarely call the media fake, instead alleging bias or questioning the veracity or standards of reporting and production. Many politicians have a functional relationship with the media, rarely criticising the media. Attacks are largely focused on the national public service broadcaster, the ABC, with limited attacks on commercial media.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:1569-2159
Uncontrolled Keywords:fake news; disinformation; misinformation; bias; political communication; journalism
Group:Faculty of Media & Communication
ID Code:39022
Deposited By: Symplectic RT2
Deposited On:02 Oct 2023 14:05
Last Modified:02 Oct 2023 14:05

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