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Television & New Media
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News

U.K. Television News

Monopoly Politics and Cynical Populism

Mike Wayne

Brunel University

Craig Murray

Queensland University of Technology

This essay provides a statistical and qualitative analysis of the hierarchical coverage of politics by UK Television news. It finds that there is a rigidly structured hierarchy of political access and focus, whereby the Prime Minister dominates over the cabinet, the cabinet dominates over ordinary MPs, the governing party dominates over the opposition, the three main parties dominate overwhelmingly over smaller parties, and the political elites dominate over ordinary members of the public. The paper also provides a framing analysis of TV news both during and after an election campaign period, and finds a skew towards `horse race' and personalization coverage which both outweigh `policy' issues. Thus television news is characterised by a hybrid of hierarchical and exclusive coverage of politics, combined with a narrowly expressed `cynicism' or populist antagonism towards politics that is personalized and anti-systemic in its focus.

Key Words: TV news • politics • monopoly • consensus • public • exclusion

This version was published on September 1, 2009

Television & New Media, Vol. 10, No. 5, 416-433 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1527476409334020


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