The democratic role of social media in political debates: The use of Twitter in the first televised US presidential debate of 2016
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Robertson, Craig T.
Dutton, William H.
Ackland, Robert
Peng, Tai-Quan
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Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Live social media commentary increasingly accompanies televised political debates. This study examines the democratic role of live Twitter commentary by analyzing a sample of tweets published during the first 2016 presidential debate between Trump and Clinton. The practices of live commenters – including joke-sharing and fact-checking – are assessed in light of six perspectives on the democratic utility of such commentary. Results show that while Twitter commentary was predominantly humorous and driven by negativity towards the candidates, a sizeable proportion of users actively engaged in practices of alternative interpretation, critique, and correction, seeking democratic accountability.
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Citation
Craig T. Robertson, William H. Dutton, Robert Ackland & Tai-Quan Peng (2019) The democratic role of social media in political debates: The use of Twitter in the first televised US presidential debate of 2016, Journal of Information Technology & Politics, 16:2, 105-118, DOI: 10.1080/19331681.2019.1590283
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Journal of Information Technology & Politics
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2037-12-31