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2 - The Phenomenon of Fake News, Part 1

Donald Trump’s Twitter Politics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2023

Anthony R. DiMaggio
Affiliation:
Lehigh University, Pennsylvania
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Summary

In Chapter 2, I review the role of Donald Trump and the right-wing media punditry in cultivating public distrust for journalists, scholars, and other experts. That anti-intellectualism widely resonated with Trump’s base. I review Trump’s use of Twitter as a venue for constructing various meanings of fake news. Trump utilized Twitter to promote right-wing values, communicate with and cultivate support from his base, attack the media, and promote falsehoods. I explore how he worked to stigmatize, manage, and suppress the “fake news” media, while examining years of his Twitter content as president, to understand how he socially constructed meanings of the “fake news” media for his supporters. I identify main themes in his tweets targeting journalists, including lamentations about Russiagate, name-calling, charges of treason, claims about incivility, complaining about poor-quality reporting, charges of liberal bias, and allegations that journalists were not reporting on the allegedly miraculous Trump economy and polls that supposedly demonstrated Trump’s popularity with Americans. A review of national polling data documents how Trump’s Twitter attacks on the media resonated with his supporters, who hold negative views of journalists, support government censorship of the media, and balkanize themselves in a right-wing media echo chamber.

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Fake News in America
Contested Meanings in the Post-Truth Era
, pp. 31 - 58
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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