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The national press and party voting in the UK

The national press and party voting in the UK
The national press and party voting in the UK
The difficulty with resolving the classic problem of whether newspapers influence voting patterns is self-selection: readers select a paper to fit their politics, and newspapers select particular types of readers. One way round this chicken-and-egg problem is to compare the voting behaviour of individuals whose politics are reinforced by their paper, with those who are cross-pressured by their paper, and to compare both with those who do not regularly read a paper.
Using the British Household Panel study to analyse voting patterns in 1992 and 1997, this study suggest that newspapers have a statistically significant effect on voting, larger for Labour than Conservative sympathizers, and larger for the 1992 than the 1997 election. The broader implications of these findings for British politics and democracy are discussed.
0032-3217
265-285
Newton, Kenneth
17e0a529-235b-4960-824d-268f31e63d61
Brynin, Malcolm
96d88d91-380d-42c2-96c2-6230ef388fe4
Newton, Kenneth
17e0a529-235b-4960-824d-268f31e63d61
Brynin, Malcolm
96d88d91-380d-42c2-96c2-6230ef388fe4

Newton, Kenneth and Brynin, Malcolm (2001) The national press and party voting in the UK. Political Studies, 49 (2), 265-285. (doi:10.1111/1467-9248.00313).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The difficulty with resolving the classic problem of whether newspapers influence voting patterns is self-selection: readers select a paper to fit their politics, and newspapers select particular types of readers. One way round this chicken-and-egg problem is to compare the voting behaviour of individuals whose politics are reinforced by their paper, with those who are cross-pressured by their paper, and to compare both with those who do not regularly read a paper.
Using the British Household Panel study to analyse voting patterns in 1992 and 1997, this study suggest that newspapers have a statistically significant effect on voting, larger for Labour than Conservative sympathizers, and larger for the 1992 than the 1997 election. The broader implications of these findings for British politics and democracy are discussed.

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Published date: June 2001

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 34516
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/34516
ISSN: 0032-3217
PURE UUID: fbf9062b-1c94-4d4f-8ea5-dcbcd9fc0490

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Date deposited: 18 May 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:47

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Author: Kenneth Newton
Author: Malcolm Brynin

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