Del otro lado

Vine a esta ciudad donde nadie me conoce y escribí estas palabras que nadie va a leer. Caminé entre extraños buscando rostros conocidos y no encontré ninguno. Traté recordar cómo se siente en el…

Smartphone

独家优惠奖金 100% 高达 1 BTC + 180 免费旋转




Suppression or Manipulation? Comparing Perspectives on US Election Security Between Biden and Trump Voters

While online forums can provide important arenas for online political discussion and engagement, a potential consequence of social media use is the manifestation of echo chambers. In an echo chamber, the partisan networks represent closed systems that reinforce within-party messages and limit exposure to alternative views. In this environment, social media users on different sides of the political spectrum will develop fundamentally separate, and potentially distorted, interpretations of political events.

In this survey, we find that roughly 75% of respondents, a clear majority, used at least one social media platform daily. We find little difference in social media use patterns between Trump and Biden voters. Essentially, the supporters of two presidential nominees engage with social media at a similar frequency and intensity.

However, when asked whether they received a message that led to concerns over the fairness of the 2020 election, a clear difference between voters emerges. Over 40% of Trump voters, and only 20% of Biden voters, reported receiving a message that made them concerned about the fairness of the 2020 national election. Even with nearly identical patterns in social media use between Trump and Biden voters, Trump voters were twice as likely to receive a message that heightened their anxiety about election integrity.

Going a step further, we asked each respondent to describe the content of the concerning message. We again find clear and stark differences between the two groups of voters. Democrats were more likely to receive a message about voter suppression or foreign manipulation, while Trump voters were far more likely to receive a message about explicit fraud, non-citizens voting, duplicate voting, or voting machine tampering. Again, this points to the different realities the two groups of voters experience, with contrasting concerns amplified across partisan networks.

The United States is becoming increasingly politically divided. While Americans across the political spectrum are equally likely to use social media, the content they find on these platforms is drastically different. The concerns over the fairness of the 2020 election represent the latest manifestation of this stark divide, and understanding these differences is the first step in addressing the increasing polarization of the American public.

Add a comment

Related posts:

Why Runners Should Pay More Attention to Dew Point Than Humidity

A couple of days ago, I got up early in the morning and went for a run when I thought I would escape the heat of the day. I began trying to figure out why and was talking to a friend who lives in a…

044 Side Effects

Here is a brief little note to say That right now I'm not feeling so hot And I cannot write, no not today, Thanks to too many vaccination shots! Now there’s no reason for alarm. I certain I’ll feel…

Scaling a Saas Company part 2 of 3

In the previous post we talked about the Mission Statement, Company Values, Methodologies and processes for growing startups. Now we will look into the organization, the business problem it solves…