How Politics Shape Views Toward Fact-Checking: Evidence from Six European Countries
Lyons, B; Merola, V; Reifler, J; et al.Stoeckel, F
Date: 8 July 2020
Journal
International Journal of Press/Politics
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Fact-checking has spread internationally, in part to confront the rise of digital disinformation
campaigns. American studies suggests ideological asymmetry in attitudes towards factchecking,
as well as greater acceptance of the practice among those more interested in and
knowledgeable about politics. We examine attitudes toward ...
Fact-checking has spread internationally, in part to confront the rise of digital disinformation
campaigns. American studies suggests ideological asymmetry in attitudes towards factchecking,
as well as greater acceptance of the practice among those more interested in and
knowledgeable about politics. We examine attitudes toward fact-checking across 6 European
counties to put these findings in a broader context (N = 6,067). We find greater familiarity with
and acceptance of fact-checking in Northern Europe (Sweden, Germany) than elsewhere (Italy,
Spain, France, Poland). We further find two dimensions of political antipathy: a left-right dimension
and an “anti-elite” dimension (including dissatisfaction with democracy and negative
feelings toward the E.U.), the latter of which more consistently predicts negative feelings toward
fact-checkers in the countries examined. Our findings demonstrate that despite general
acceptance of the movement, significant political divides remain. Those less likely to trust factcheckers
could be more vulnerable to disinformation targeting these divides, leading to a spiral
of cynicism.
Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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