Report | May 14, 2018 X Facebook Threads LinkedIn WhatsApp Share In Western Europe, Public Attitudes Toward News Media More Divided by Populist Views Than Left-Right Ideology Appendix D: Detailed tables By Amy Mitchell, Katie Simmons, Katerina Eva Matsa, Laura Silver, Elisa Shearer, Courtney Johnson, Mason Walker and Kyle Taylor Table of Contents In Western Europe, Public Attitudes Toward News Media More Divided by Populist Views Than Left-Right Ideology 1. Populist views, more than left-right identity, play a role in opinions of the news media in Western Europe 2. Southern European countries more fragmented in news sources, but for nearly all countries, top main source is public, not private 3. News outlets are less politically polarized than Western Europeans perceive 4. Most Western Europeans trust public broadcasters, but those who hold populist views less so 5. Many Western Europeans get news via social media, but in some countries, substantial minorities do not pay attention to the source Acknowledgments Methodology Appendix A: How news outlets were selected in each country Appendix B: About the focus groups Appendix C: How this study measures populism Appendix D: Detailed tables Appendix E: References Next: Appendix E: References ← Prev Page 1 … 8 9 10 11 12 13 Next Page → Report PDFTopline(Danish | Dansk)(Dutch | Nederlands)(French | Français)(German | Deutsch)(Italian | Italiano)(Spanish | Español)(Swedish | Svenska)In Western Europe, Populist Parties Tap Anti-Establishment Frustration but Have Little Appeal Across Ideological DivideFall 2017 Media and Politics in Western Europe Survey