Why we stopped listening to the other side: how partisan cues in news coverage undermine the deliberative foundations of democracy

  • Arendt F
  • Northup T
  • Forrai M
  • et al.
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Abstract

Recent theorizing on deliberative democracy has put political listening at the core of meaningful democratic deliberation. In the present experiment (N = 827), we investigated whether news media can improve diverse political listening in the United States via a reduction in party cue salience. Although Republican (Democratic) participants showed a strong preference for listening to speeches given by Republican (Democratic) politicians when party cues were highly salient, this bias in selective political listening was reduced or even absent when news items provided no or only low-salience cues. Conditional process analysis indicated that (automatically activated) implicit and (overtly expressed) explicit party attitudes mediated this effect. There are important implications: Current journalism practices tend to exacerbate tribal us-vs-them thinking by emphasizing partisan cues, nudging citizens toward not listening to political ideas from the other political camp. A more helpful news-choice architecture tones down partisan language, nudging citizens toward more diverse political listening.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Arendt, F., Northup, T., Forrai, M., & Scheufele, D. (2023). Why we stopped listening to the other side: how partisan cues in news coverage undermine the deliberative foundations of democracy. Journal of Communication, 73(5), 413–426. https://doi.org/10.1093/joc/jqad007

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