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The use of the political categories of Brexiter and Remainer in online comments about the EU referendum

Meredith, JM; Richardson, E

The use of the political categories of Brexiter and Remainer in online comments about the EU referendum Thumbnail


Authors

JM Meredith

E Richardson



Abstract

In June 2016, the UK held a referendum on EU membership; 52% of those who voted, voted to leave, and 48% voted to remain. During the referendum campaign two identities emerged: ‘Brexiter’ and ‘Remainer’, which remained salient post-referendum. This study explores how the categories of Brexiter and Remainer were deployed by posters online. Data comprises comment threads collected from four online newspapers both during the campaign and after the vote, which focus on the Brexit campaign promise: ‘We send £350m a week to the EU. Let’s fund our NHS instead’. We draw on membership categorisation analysis and discursive psychology to analyse when categories were made salient and what responses to the invocation of categories were. Analysis revealed that posters explicitly categorise the outgroup and in doing so implicitly define their group. Posters resisted other political identities when attributed to them in relation to the referendum. The analysis shows how Brexiter and Remainer are new, albeit contested, political categories and identities in their own right, with other political identities resisted when used. The paper highlights implications for the political system in the UK and for social divisions within UK society.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 31, 2018
Online Publication Date Jan 22, 2019
Publication Date Jan 22, 2019
Deposit Date Aug 9, 2018
Publicly Available Date Jan 22, 2020
Journal Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology
Print ISSN 1052-9284
Electronic ISSN 1099-1298
Publisher Wiley
Volume 29
Issue 1
Pages 43-55
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/casp.2384
Publisher URL |https://doi.org/10.1002/casp.2384
Related Public URLs https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10991298

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