2010. "Media Coverage of Right-Wing Populist Leaders." Communications 35(2): 141-163.Bos L, Brug W v d and De Vreese CH (2010) Media coverage of right-wing populist leaders. Communications 35: 141-163.Bos, L., van der Brug, W., & Vreese, C. de. (2010). Media coverage of ...
It is often argued that right-wing populist party leaders are dependent on the media for their public image, which in turn is key for their electoral success. This study tests this assumption by comparing the effects of the media coverage of 2 Dutch right-wing populist leaders with the ...
This time-series study combines a content analysis of media appearances of the right-wing populist leader Geert Wilders in 2006 with his party's popularity in the polls. The content analysis focuses on three aspects of the media coverage: (1) visibility, (2) whether he articulates a vision ...
On the other hand there is a male Pakeha “senior political figure” in a rightwing party who during the course of a fraud investigation had someone come forth accusing him of serial sexual offending. Eventually the number of charges grew to nine involving at least two victims. He resigned ...
With ‘people’ central to two very different depictions of climate change and climate action, this Brief Communication explores references to ‘people’ in social media coverage of climate change. We focus on Twitter (now X); at the time of our study, it was an increasingly used online foru...
(2011). How the media shape perceptions of right-wing populist leaders. Political Communication, 28(2), 182–206. Article Google Scholar Brandenburg, H. (2005). Political bias in the Irish media: A quantitative study of campaign coverage during the 2002 general election. Irish Political ...
Abstract The rapid development of communication technology and of the products of the culture industry has brought about a worldwide phenomenon that has taken shape particularly in the decades after World War II. Known as “mediatization”, this phenomenon involves various processes, such as (a) ...
Similarly, media coverage has been identified as a driver—rather than an echo—of public support for right-wing populist parties in the UK8. Further support for the power of the media emerges from two quasi-experimental field studies in the UK. In one case, when the Sun tabloid switched ...
In this paper, we investigate if the use of populist elements in general media coverage has increased over time. Focusing on a 28-year period in the Netherlands, we find clear evidence for an increasing presence of people-centric, anti-elitist and right- and left-exclusionist coverage in ...
Since disgraced former President Donald Trump was indicted for federal criminal charges related to his possession of classified documents, his supporters at outlets owned by right-wing media mogul Rupert Murdoch have claimed that the Presidential Records Act exonerates him from the charges. But a rec...