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A tale of three tribes : UK MPs, Twitter and the EU Referendum

Ward, SJ; McLoughlin, LDG; Southern, R; Gibson, R

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Authors

LDG McLoughlin

R Southern

R Gibson



Abstract

This paper examines the structure of Twitter communication networks between MPs during the 2016 EU Referendum campaign. In particular, the research examines the impact of Twitter in two dimensions: (1) how far social media might facilitate inter-party linkages thus eroding traditional partisan relations between MPs? This was given added potential by the supposedly cross-party nature of the Referendum campaign and, therefore, we specifically examined the collective communicative networks that formed around Leave and Remain amongst MPs; (2) Given the potential of social media to provide a platform for individual politicians to personalize campaigns, we asked how far social media might disrupt traditional formal intra-party hierarchies? Did, for example, backbench or relatively unknown figures come to the fore in the EU debate? Our results indicate that whilst there existed a high degree of partisanship, interestingly, Remainer MPs tended to adhere to party networks resulting in a divided remain network. By contrast, the Leave network was more unified but also more porous. Within the networks themselves, the centrality of individual MPs did not always reflect their formal status.

Citation

Ward, S., McLoughlin, L., Southern, R., & Gibson, R. (2020). A tale of three tribes : UK MPs, Twitter and the EU Referendum. Information Polity, 25(1), 49-66. https://doi.org/10.3233/IP-190140

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 1, 2019
Online Publication Date Sep 29, 2019
Publication Date Mar 23, 2020
Deposit Date Oct 15, 2019
Publicly Available Date Oct 15, 2019
Journal Information Polity
Print ISSN 1570-1255
Electronic ISSN 1875-8754
Publisher IOS Press
Volume 25
Issue 1
Pages 49-66
DOI https://doi.org/10.3233/IP-190140
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/IP-190140
Related Public URLs https://informationpolity.com/

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