The likeability of populism on social media in the 2018 Italian general election

This article focuses on the controlled communication that the main Italian political leaders – Silvio Berlusconi, Luigi Di Maio, Pietro Grasso, Giorgia Meloni, Matteo Renzi, Matteo Salvini – published on their Facebook profiles during a period of four weeks before the election day. Taking the 2018 I...

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Main Authors: Giuliano Bobba, Franca Roncarolo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università degli Studi di Catania 2018-06-01
Series:Italian Political Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://italianpoliticalscience.com/index.php/ips/article/view/32
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spelling doaj-fdf04502602341fabda1caf61878f4982021-06-29T20:41:19ZengUniversità degli Studi di CataniaItalian Political Science2420-84342018-06-01131516214The likeability of populism on social media in the 2018 Italian general electionGiuliano Bobba0Franca Roncarolo1University of TurinUniversity of TurinThis article focuses on the controlled communication that the main Italian political leaders – Silvio Berlusconi, Luigi Di Maio, Pietro Grasso, Giorgia Meloni, Matteo Renzi, Matteo Salvini – published on their Facebook profiles during a period of four weeks before the election day. Taking the 2018 Italian general election campaign as an illustration, this article aims at clarifying whether and to what extent populist communication on Facebook differ from non-populist communication in terms of volume and success. Facebook was selected as the source, since digital politics and social media are becoming increasingly relevant for both political parties and citizens. The article shows that messages containing populist claims have more success (i.e. more ‘likes’) compared to non-populist messages. It also shows that populist posts against the elites or the immigrants are the largest ones, while the more successful ones are those that combines these latter elements with the appeal to the people.http://italianpoliticalscience.com/index.php/ips/article/view/32populismsocial mediaitalian politicselection campaignpolitical leaders
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giuliano Bobba
Franca Roncarolo
spellingShingle Giuliano Bobba
Franca Roncarolo
The likeability of populism on social media in the 2018 Italian general election
Italian Political Science
populism
social media
italian politics
election campaign
political leaders
author_facet Giuliano Bobba
Franca Roncarolo
author_sort Giuliano Bobba
title The likeability of populism on social media in the 2018 Italian general election
title_short The likeability of populism on social media in the 2018 Italian general election
title_full The likeability of populism on social media in the 2018 Italian general election
title_fullStr The likeability of populism on social media in the 2018 Italian general election
title_full_unstemmed The likeability of populism on social media in the 2018 Italian general election
title_sort likeability of populism on social media in the 2018 italian general election
publisher Università degli Studi di Catania
series Italian Political Science
issn 2420-8434
publishDate 2018-06-01
description This article focuses on the controlled communication that the main Italian political leaders – Silvio Berlusconi, Luigi Di Maio, Pietro Grasso, Giorgia Meloni, Matteo Renzi, Matteo Salvini – published on their Facebook profiles during a period of four weeks before the election day. Taking the 2018 Italian general election campaign as an illustration, this article aims at clarifying whether and to what extent populist communication on Facebook differ from non-populist communication in terms of volume and success. Facebook was selected as the source, since digital politics and social media are becoming increasingly relevant for both political parties and citizens. The article shows that messages containing populist claims have more success (i.e. more ‘likes’) compared to non-populist messages. It also shows that populist posts against the elites or the immigrants are the largest ones, while the more successful ones are those that combines these latter elements with the appeal to the people.
topic populism
social media
italian politics
election campaign
political leaders
url http://italianpoliticalscience.com/index.php/ips/article/view/32
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