Abstract
The growth of partisan news sources has raised concerns that people will increasingly select attitude-consistent information, which might lead to increasing political polarization. Thus far, there is limited research on the long-term mutual influences between selective exposure and political attitudes.
To remedy this, this study investigates the reciprocal influences between selective exposure and political attitudes over several years, using a three-wave panel survey conducted in Sweden during 2014–2016. More specifically, we analyse how ideological selective exposure to both traditional and online news media influences citizens’ ideological leaning.
Findings suggest that
- people seek-out ideologically consistent print news and online news and
- such attitude-consistent news exposure reinforces citizens’ ideological leaning over time.
In practice, however, such reinforcement effects are hampered by - relatively low overall ideological selective exposure and a
- significant degree of cross-cutting news exposure online.
These findings are discussed in light of selective exposure theory and the reinforcing spirals model.
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