ABSTRACT

Social media and social networking services are integrated into the American political process and have profoundly influenced political communication and participation. Social media platforms have transformed the political landscape by revolutionizing information dissemination, citizen engagement, and public opinion formation and change. Politicians use social media to communicate directly with voters in an unmediated and unfiltered manner. Comparatively, voters use social media to follow the latest messaging from politicians accompanied by demonstrating their support for particular politicians.

This book is a comprehensive examination of the role of digital and social media in the 2020 U.S. presidential election. Political discourse during the 2020 election revealed political disharmony and a deep political division among vast swaths of Americans that was powered, in part, by social media. This book reveals how digital and social media have reshaped power dynamics by altering the relationships among citizens, politicians, and traditional media outlets, the emergence of new influencers, and the impact of online activism on policy agendas.

This book, Social Media Politics, includes scholars with varied backgrounds and experience, using both quantitative and qualitative methodologies, from leading research institutions around the nation. Students, scholars, and practitioners will gain new knowledge to more clearly understand the role social media played in the 2020 presidential campaign.

chapter 1|18 pages

The 2020 U.S. Presidential Election and Social Media and Trump

Fomenting Controversy and Distrust in the Democratic System

chapter 4|25 pages

Emotional Contagion as the New Propaganda?

Examining Fear's Mediating Effect on Political Advertising Exposure in Social Media

chapter 5|22 pages

Presidential Tweets in the News

How Did the Partisan News Media Report on the Candidates' Tweets during the U.S. 2020 Presidential Election Campaign?

chapter 7|20 pages

Voters-Turned-Political Influencers

Social Media Users Maintain Popularity by Cultivating Support for 2020 U.S. Presidential Election Candidates

chapter 8|21 pages

Platform Guardrails

Social Media Accountability toward Political Communication

chapter 9|19 pages

Information Warfare Fostering Political Polarization

Facebook Addiction, News Credibility, and Concern of Foreign Interference

chapter 10|19 pages

The “Big Lie” Lurked Online

Social Media and Perceptions of Electoral Integrity Prior to Election 2020

chapter 11|24 pages

The Politically Engaged

Gen Z's Use of TikTok and Instagram in the 2020 Presidential Elections

chapter 14|23 pages

Blame the Cobwebs or the Spiders?

The Impact of Social Media Use on Political Knowledge and Political Participation

chapter 15|26 pages

Narrating the Pandemic

Compounding Crisis, Metajournalism, Politics, and Presidential Responses between Communication Ecology and Collective Memory