Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Newsletters Press Donate My Account
Pew Research Center Logo

Read our research on: Congress | Economy | Gender

Pew Research Center Logo
Research Topics
All PublicationsMethodsShort ReadsTools & ResourcesExpertsAbout
Topics
Politics & PolicyInternational AffairsImmigration & MigrationRace & EthnicityReligionGenerations & AgeGender & LGBTQ
Family & RelationshipsEconomy & WorkScienceInternet & TechnologyNews Habits & MediaMethodological ResearchFull topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the PacificEurope & RussiaLatin AmericaMiddle East & North AfricaNorth AmericaSub-Saharan AfricaMultiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
FeaturesFact SheetsVideosData Essays
Research Topics
Topics
Politics & PolicyInternational AffairsImmigration & MigrationRace & EthnicityReligionGenerations & AgeGender & LGBTQFamily & RelationshipsEconomy & WorkScienceInternet & TechnologyNews Habits & MediaMethodological ResearchFull topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the PacificEurope & RussiaLatin AmericaMiddle East & North AfricaNorth AmericaSub-Saharan AfricaMultiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
FeaturesFact SheetsVideosData Essays
All PublicationsMethodsShort ReadsTools & ResourcesExpertsAboutMy Account
DONATE

Read our research on: Congress | Economy | Gender

Home Research Topics News Habits & Media Media & Society Politics & Media Media Polarization
Pew Research CenterSeptember 29, 2017
Covering President Trump in a Polarized Media Environment

CNN’s foreign affairs focus tied more to coverage of U.S.-Russia relations than other mixed-audience outlets

← Prev Page
Page24Page25Page26Page27Page28You are reading page29Page30Page31Page32Page33Page34
Next Page →
CNN’s foreign affairs focus tied more to coverage of U.S.-Russia relations than other mixed-audience outlets

Post Infographics

Covering President Trump in a Polarized Media Environment
News outlets differed in the sources they cited and assessments of Trump/administration
Outlets with a left-leaning audience more likely to refute a statement made by Trump/administration
Five topics accounted for two-thirds of all coverage of the early days of the Trump administration
Trump/administration initiated the most coverage, was the source type most cited
Stories with multiple source types most likely to have a negative assessment of Trump/administration
Coverage of Trump’s first 60 days delivered greater share of negative assessments than coverage of previous presidents
Outlets with a left-leaning, right-leaning and mixed audience covered similar topics, used similar frames
Outlets appealing to a right-leaning audience less likely than other outlet groups to cite multiple source types
Outlets appealing to a right-leaning audience less likely to cite administration, experts, interest groups
Outlets with a right-leaning audience had far more stories with a positive assessment of Trump/administration
Outlets with left-leaning and mixed audiences over time became less negative, more neutral in their assessments of the Trump administration
Outlets with a left-leaning audience most frequently had journalist refutations of statements from Trump/administration
News outlets were similar in use of Trump tweets
Administration statements and actions drive most coverage for all outlet groups
Five topics accounted for two-thirds of all coverage of the early days of the Trump administration
Nearly all stories for three out of the five most prominent topics framed around Trump’s leadership versus policy agenda
Source types cited varied some by story topic
Positive assessments of Trump/ administration rare across all five prominent topics
Trump/administration triggered stories across all main topics, but other actors also came into play
Trump/administration most likely to be refuted in stories about president’s political skills
Trump tweets cited in about one-in-five stories about political skills and immigration
Coverage of Trump delivered greater share of negative assessments than coverage of previous presidents
Coverage in 2017 was framed much more around leadership and character than in the past
Since 1993, coverage less prominent for domestic issues, more prominent for management and political approach
Fox, CNN and MSNBC each accounted for the largest portion of content in their respective outlet group
Fox News’ emphasis on domestic issues driven by coverage of immigration
Source types in Fox News coverage notably different than in other outlets with a right-leaning audience
Fox News coverage more driven by Trump/administration, less by media than other outlets with a right leaning audience
CNN’s foreign affairs focus tied more to coverage of U.S.-Russia relations than other mixed-audience outlets
CNN’s coverage more negative than other mixed-audience outlets
MSNBC’s assessments of Trump/ administration far more negative than those from other left-appealing outlets
MSNBC cited the media more often, experts less often than other outlets with a left-leaning audience
MSNBC emphasized U.S.-Russia relations far more than other outlets with a left-leaning audience
Mix of source types by platform
Mix of source types by platform and outlet group
Evaluation of Trump/administration by platform
Evaluation of Trump/administration by platform and outlet group
Presence of Trump’s tweets by platform
Presence of Trump’s tweets by platform and outlet group
Topic: Domestic issues
Topic: President’s management and political approach
Topic: Foreign affairs
Assessment of Trump/administration
Source type
Number of source types cited
Presence of tweet
Broad topic category for each presidency based on comparison sample

Pew Research Center
1615 L St. NW, Suite 800
Washington, DC 20036
USA

(+1) 202-419-4300 | Main
(+1) 202-857-8562 | Fax
(+1) 202-419-4372 | Media Inquiries

Research Topics
Politics & PolicyInternational AffairsImmigration & MigrationRace & EthnicityReligionGenerations & AgeGender & LGBTQ
Family & RelationshipsEconomy & WorkScienceInternet & TechnologyNews Habits & MediaMethodological ResearchFull topic list
Follow Us
Email Newsletters Facebook Twitter Tumblr YouTube RSS

About Pew Research Center Pew Research Center is a nonpartisan fact tank that informs the public about the issues, attitudes and trends shaping the world. It conducts public opinion polling, demographic research, media content analysis and other empirical social science research. Pew Research Center does not take policy positions. It is a subsidiary of The Pew Charitable Trusts.

Copyright 2023 Pew Research Center About Terms & Conditions Privacy Policy Reprints, Permissions & Use Policy Feedback Careers