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Canadians are politically polarized, but social media likely not culprit: study

91ƵPeople on Twitter are not representative of the broader population91Ƶ
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The Twitter app on a mobile phone. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP, Matt Rourke

Social media might not be to blame for Canadians91Ƶ ideological polarization, a new report on digital democracy in Canada finds.

The latest findings are from an ongoing effort led by the Public Policy Forum and McGill University91Ƶs Max Bell School of Public Policy called the Digital Democracy Project.

91ƵA lot of people don91Ƶt use social media very actively,91Ƶ said reseracher Eric Merkley. 91ƵPeople on Twitter are not representative of the broader population.91Ƶ

Instead, the study argues polarization in Canada arises partly from intense party loyalty and how far apart Canada91Ƶs political parties are, meaning party positions are an important factor.

Also, researchers found that people did not appear to make meaningful distinctions in their views between politicians from opposing parties and their supporters.

91ƵThis is troubling,91Ƶ the study says, because it suggests 91Ƶpolarization does not just influence people91Ƶs opinions about the parties, but also how they view ordinary Canadians.91Ƶ Each other, in other words.

Researchers found evidence that Canadians are 91Ƶaffectively polarized91Ƶ 91Ƶ they feel negatively towards other people simply for being part of the opposing group.

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That was based on three measures, including the levels of warmth participants in the study feel for their ideological comrades and opponents; how much they associate their allies and opponents with positive and negative traits; and how comfortable they feel with having someone from an opposing ideology as a neighbour, friend or relative.

91ƵPartisans have substantially colder and more negative feelings about ideologically opposed parties, compared to those that are ideologically proximate,91Ƶ and also see opposed parties as 91Ƶmore socially distant,91Ƶ the study says.

The study goes on to note that though Canadians do seem to be polarized, it91Ƶs probably not our use of social media that is causing the divide.

Based on an analysis of the activity of about 50,000 Twitter accounts, the Digital Democracy Project researchers found evidence supporting the theory that users tend to create 91Ƶfilter bubbles91Ƶ for themselves. Very few partisans, it found, follow information sources from other parties.

But the study suggests the echo chambers do not extend far beyond Twitter.

By comparing the Twitter data to information gleaned from the survey, researchers also found just 16 per cent of Canadians are exposed to strongly partisan news sources. A tiny fraction 91Ƶ fewer than one per cent 91Ƶ get more than half their news from 91Ƶpartisan-congenial91Ƶ outlets.

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Most Canadians still engage broadly with mainstream news sources, the study suggests.

If media consumption is not to blame for polarization, the answer the study offers instead is that 91Ƶthe biggest driver of polarization seems to be ideology and partisanship themselves.91Ƶ

Strong partisans have much more intense feelings towards opposing parties than weak partisans, the study finds.

Christian Paas-Lang, The Canadian Press

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