Speaking their Mind: Populist Style and Antagonistic Messaging in the Tweets of Donald Trump, Narendra Modi, Nigel Farage, and Geert Wilders

dc.contributor.authorGonawela, A’ndre
dc.contributor.authorPal, Joyojeet
dc.contributor.authorThawani, Udit
dc.contributor.authorvan der Vlugt, Elmer
dc.contributor.authorOut, Wim
dc.contributor.authorChandra, Priyank
dc.date.accessioned2020-06-06T13:06:14Z
dc.date.available2020-06-06T13:06:14Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description.abstractThe authors in this study examined the function and public reception of critical tweeting in online campaigns of four nationalist populist politicians during major national election campaigns. Using a mix of qualitative coding and case study inductive methods, we analyzed the tweets of Narendra Modi, Nigel Farage, Donald Trump, and Geert Wilders before the 2014 Indian general elections, the 2016 UK Brexit referendum, the 2016 US presidential election, and the 2017 Dutch general election, respectively. Our data show that Trump is a consistent outlier in terms of using critical language on Twitter when compared to Wilders, Farage, and Modi, but that all four leaders show significant investment in various forms of antagonistic messaging including personal insults, sarcasm, and labeling, and that these are rewarded online by higher retweet rates. Building on the work of Murray Edelman and his notion of a political spectacle, we examined Twitter as a performative space for critical rhetoric within the frame of nationalist politics. We found that cultural and political differences among the four settings also impact how each politician employs these tactics. Our work proposes that studies of social media spaces need to bring normative questions into traditional notions of collaboration. As we show here, political actors may benefit from in-group coalescence around antagonistic messaging, which while serving as a call to arms for online collaboration for those ideologically aligned, may on a societal level lead to greater polarization.de
dc.identifier.doi10.1007/s10606-018-9316-2
dc.identifier.pissn1573-7551
dc.identifier.urihttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10606-018-9316-2
dc.identifier.urihttps://dl.eusset.eu/handle/20.500.12015/3761
dc.publisherSpringer
dc.relation.ispartofComputer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW): Vol. 27, No. 3-6
dc.relation.ispartofseriesComputer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW)
dc.subjectPolitical attack
dc.subjectPolitical communication
dc.subjectPolitical spectacle
dc.subjectPolitics
dc.subjectPopulism
dc.subjectSocial media
dc.subjectTwitter
dc.titleSpeaking their Mind: Populist Style and Antagonistic Messaging in the Tweets of Donald Trump, Narendra Modi, Nigel Farage, and Geert Wildersde
dc.typeText/Journal Article
gi.citation.endPage326
gi.citation.startPage293
gi.citations.count31
gi.citations.elementGaston Franssen, Jan Rock (2020): The Dutch star on the flag of Europe: the personalisation of national identity in Geert Wilders’ celebrity politics, In: Celebrity Studies 3(11), doi:10.1080/19392397.2020.1800673
gi.citations.elementJoris Lammers, Matthew Baldwin (2020): Make America gracious again: Collective nostalgia can increase and decrease support for right‐wing populist rhetoric, In: European Journal of Social Psychology 5(50), doi:10.1002/ejsp.2673
gi.citations.elementMegan Ward (2020): Walls and Cows: Social Media, Vigilante Vantage, and Political Discourse, In: Social Media + Society 2(6), doi:10.1177/2056305120928513
gi.citations.elementLin Song, Avishek Ray (2023): “How can a small app piss off an entire country?”: India’s TikTok ban in the light of everyday techno-nationalism, In: Inter-Asia Cultural Studies 3(24), doi:10.1080/14649373.2023.2209424
gi.citations.elementCarola Schoor, Reeta Pöyhtäri, Tuija Saresma (2024): The Netherlands: Populism from Margins to the Mainstream, In: Populism, Twitter and the European Public Sphere, doi:10.1007/978-3-031-41737-5_2
gi.citations.elementJana Lasser, Segun T. Aroyehun, Fabio Carrella, Almog Simchon, David Garcia, Stephan Lewandowsky (2023): From alternative conceptions of honesty to alternative facts in communications by US politicians, In: Nature Human Behaviour 12(7), doi:10.1038/s41562-023-01691-w
gi.citations.elementDelia Dumitrescu, Andrew R N Ross (2020): Embedding, quoting, or paraphrasing? Investigating the effects of political leaders’ tweets in online news articles: The case of Donald Trump, In: New Media & Society 8(23), doi:10.1177/1461444820920881
gi.citations.elementTamás Tóth, Manuel Goyanes, Márton Demeter (2023): Extend the context! Measuring explicit and implicit populism on three different textual levels, In: Communications 2(49), doi:10.1515/commun-2022-0009
gi.citations.elementSaloni Dash, Rynaa Grover, Gazal Shekhawat, Sukhnidh Kaur, Dibyendu Mishra, Joyojeet Pal (2022): Insights Into Incitement: A Computational Perspective on Dangerous Speech on Twitter in India, In: ACM SIGCAS/SIGCHI Conference on Computing and Sustainable Societies (COMPASS), doi:10.1145/3530190.3534800
gi.citations.elementAnirban Sen, Debanjan Ghatak, Kapil Kumar, Gurjeet Khanuja, Deepak Bansal, Mehak Gupta, Kumari Rekha, Saloni Bhogale, Priyamvada Trivedi, Aaditeshwar Seth (2019): Studying the discourse on economic policies in India using mass media, social media, and the parliamentary question hour data, In: Proceedings of the 2nd ACM SIGCAS Conference on Computing and Sustainable Societies, doi:10.1145/3314344.3332489
gi.citations.elementJoonas Koivukoski, Salla-Maaria Laaksonen, Janne Zareff, Aleksi Knuutila (2024): Challenging and Enhancing Legitimacy Through Humor: A Comparative Study of Candidates’ Use of Humor on Facebook before the 2019 and 2023 Finnish Parliamentary Elections, In: Alternatives: Global, Local, Political 1(50), doi:10.1177/03043754241272272
gi.citations.elementAnupam Das, Ralph Schroeder (2020): Online disinformation in the run-up to the Indian 2019 election, In: Information, Communication & Society 12(24), doi:10.1080/1369118x.2020.1736123
gi.citations.elementNeelam Sharma (2022): Populism and social media use: comparing the Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s strategic use of Twitter during the 2014 and the 2019 election campaigns, In: Media Asia 2(50), doi:10.1080/01296612.2022.2135269
gi.citations.elementGunaro Setiawan, Denni Arli, Peter Woods (2022): “In the servant we trust”: The brand impact of servant leadership from the case of a rising reformist, In: Journal of Marketing Communications 5(30), doi:10.1080/13527266.2022.2152474
gi.citations.elementVihang Jumle, Karthik KR Vignesh (2024): Twitter and the projection of political personalities in India, In: Commonwealth & Comparative Politics 2(62), doi:10.1080/14662043.2024.2348858
gi.citations.elementRimjhim, Sourav Dandapat (2022): Is gender-based violence a confluence of culture? Empirical evidence from social media, In: PeerJ Computer Science, doi:10.7717/peerj-cs.1051
gi.citations.elementJeffrey Lazarus, Judd R. Thornton (2020): Bully Pulpit? Twitter Users’ Engagement With President Trump’s Tweets, In: Social Science Computer Review 5(39), doi:10.1177/0894439320946578
gi.citations.elementSwapan Deep Arora, Guninder Pal Singh, Anirban Chakraborty, Moutusy Maity (2022): Polarization and social media: A systematic review and research agenda, In: Technological Forecasting and Social Change, doi:10.1016/j.techfore.2022.121942
gi.citations.elementLucas Santos De Oliveira, Pedro O. S. Vaz-de-Melo, Marcelo S. Amaral, José Antônio G. Pinho (2020): Do Politicians Talk about Politics? Assessing Online Communication Patterns of Brazilian Politicians, In: ACM Transactions on Social Computing 4(3), doi:10.1145/3412326
gi.citations.elementPalashi Vaghela, Ramaravind K Mothilal, Joyojeet Pal (2021): Birds of a Caste - How Caste Hierarchies Manifest in Retweet Behavior of Indian Politicians, In: Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction CSCW3(4), doi:10.1145/3432911
gi.citations.elementMilica Vučković, Patricija Topić (2023): Two Faces of Zoran Milanović: From Anti-Populist to Rhetorical Furious Populist, In: Scandalogy 4, doi:10.1007/978-3-031-47156-8_3
gi.citations.elementGerhard Vowe (2020): Digitalisierung als grundlegender Veränderungsprozess der politischen Kommunikation, In: Handbuch Politische Kommunikation, doi:10.1007/978-3-658-26242-6_9-1
gi.citations.elementMurtuza Shahzad, Hamed Alhoori (2021): Public Reaction to Scientific Research via Twitter Sentiment Prediction, In: Journal of Data and Information Science 1(7), doi:10.2478/jdis-2022-0003
gi.citations.elementSammy Basu (2024): 'Laughing at us', In: The European Journal of Humour Research 1(12), doi:10.7592/ejhr.2024.12.1.833
gi.citations.elementAnmol Panda, Sunandan Chakraborty, Noopur Raval, Han Zhang, Mugdha Mohapatra, Syeda Zainab Akbar, Joyojeet Pal (2020): Affording Extremes, In: Proceedings of the 2020 International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies and Development, doi:10.1145/3392561.3394637
gi.citations.elementNicholas Hayes, Robert Poole (2022): A diachronic corpus-assisted semantic domain analysis of US presidential debates, In: Corpora 3(17), doi:10.3366/cor.2022.0266
gi.citations.elementUri Kidron, Piki Ish-Shalom (2024): The Populist Name Game: About Populism and Naming, In: Political Studies Review, doi:10.1177/14789299241242259
gi.citations.elementJens Kjeldgaard-Christiansen (2024): The Voice of the People: Populism and Donald Trump’s Use of Informal Voice, In: Society 3(61), doi:10.1007/s12115-024-00969-7
gi.citations.elementAlex Jiahong Lu, Xuecong Xu (2020): "Learning for the Rise of China": Exploring Uses and Gratifications of State-Owned Online Platform, In: Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction CSCW1(4), doi:10.1145/3392835
gi.citations.elementGerhard Vowe (2022): Digitalisierung als grundlegender Veränderungsprozess der politischen Kommunikation, In: Handbuch Politische Kommunikation, doi:10.1007/978-3-658-26233-4_9
gi.citations.elementJames Bingaman, Scott E. Caplan (2022): Cyberbully-in-chief: exploring Donald Trump’s aggressive communication behavior on Twitter, In: Atlantic Journal of Communication 4(31), doi:10.1080/15456870.2022.2047683

Files