Non-restricted Winter 2026 convocation theses and dissertations will be discoverable in ERA on March 16. Congratulations to all our graduates!

#It’sComplicated: The Relationship between Traditional Media and Twitter during the 2019 Canadian Federal Election

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Citation for Previous Publication

Link to Related Item

Abstract

Description

To study the interaction between traditional and social media in Canadian political coverage and how that may inform public opinion by exploring the agenda setting and intermedia agenda setting effects between Canada’s two national newspapers and Twitter during the 2019 Canadian federal election. Design: This project takes the case study approach, using mixed method content analysis to explore how much Twitter may have influenced election coverage in the National Post and The Globe and Mail during the six weeks of the 43rd Canadian election campaign. Findings: This study found that the same six issues were most frequently discussed both on Twitter and the newspapers; and that the intermedia agenda setting mostly flowed from traditional to social media. It also found that while traditional media tended to influence salience on Twitter, it did so only for short bursts of time. Additionally, political sentiment on Twitter was generally aligned with the election outcome of a minority Liberal government. Originality and Value: This project contributes modestly to the understanding of how traditional and social media interact, possibly influencing political discourse and public opinion in Canada.

Item Type

http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_1843

Alternative

Other License Text / Link

Language

en

Location

Time Period

Source