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All talk, no action? Politicians’ agenda responsiveness to citizens’ engagement on social media

By: Poljak, Željko and Russell, Annelise.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Political Research Quarterly Description: 78(2), Jun, 2025: p.495-508.Subject(s): Agenda-setting, Agenda responsiveness, Public opinion, social media, Citizens engagement In: Political Research QuarterlySummary: Studies have shown that citizens’ engagement on social media drives politicians to adapt the issues they discuss online. However, for representative democracy to function effectively, politicians must not only discuss these issues but also act on them. This paper explores whether higher citizens’ engagement on social media shapes the issues politicians address online and leads to substantive agenda responsiveness, such as proposing legislation or raising issues in parliament. To do this, we examined over 370,000 Facebook posts by more than 350 politicians in Australia, Belgium, and the United States. Our results indicate that higher citizens’ engagement on politicians’ own social media regarding an issue increases the likelihood of politicians promoting concrete legislative or parliamentary actions related to that issue, regardless of the issue’s salience. These findings highlight social media’s role in informing and motivating politicians’ agenda responsiveness, with important implications for the current state of representative democracy.- Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/10659129241309296
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
78(2), Jun, 2025: p.495-508 Available AR136800

Studies have shown that citizens’ engagement on social media drives politicians to adapt the issues they discuss online. However, for representative democracy to function effectively, politicians must not only discuss these issues but also act on them. This paper explores whether higher citizens’ engagement on social media shapes the issues politicians address online and leads to substantive agenda responsiveness, such as proposing legislation or raising issues in parliament. To do this, we examined over 370,000 Facebook posts by more than 350 politicians in Australia, Belgium, and the United States. Our results indicate that higher citizens’ engagement on politicians’ own social media regarding an issue increases the likelihood of politicians promoting concrete legislative or parliamentary actions related to that issue, regardless of the issue’s salience. These findings highlight social media’s role in informing and motivating politicians’ agenda responsiveness, with important implications for the current state of representative democracy.- Reproduced


https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/10659129241309296

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