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News Media and Political Attitudes in Spain

Spanish/español

Below are specific findings about news media attitudes and habits in Spain. The findings come from a Pew Research Center survey about news media and politics across eight Western European countries conducted from Oct. 30 to Dec. 20, 2017. The survey covered five countries in the north (Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden and the United Kingdom) and three in the south (France, Italy and Spain).

Views of the news media in Spain

The sense of importance of and trust in the news media vary considerably by country. In general, adults in northern European countries – for example, Sweden and Germany – are more likely to say the news media are very important and that they trust the news media, while people in France and Italy are the least likely to say this.

Spain is unique in that a majority of Spanish adults (59%) consider the news media very important to society, but a smaller portion (31%) say they trust the news media. This includes just 5% who trust the news media a lot.

In most of the countries surveyed, people who hold populist views are less likely to say the news media are important and to trust the news media than people who don’t hold populist views. In general, the differences in these attitudes about the news media are small when comparing between people on the left and right of the ideological spectrum.

In Spain, there is a divide by populist views on trust in the news media: 26% of people with populist views say they trust the news media, compared with 51% of those without populist views. However, on the question of importance, a majority of both populists and non-populists in Spain say they think the news media are very important for society.

Main sources used for news in Spain

When it comes to the news sources people say they turn to most frequently, the divides between adults with and without populist leanings are not as strong as those seen for attitudes about the news media more generally. And in the southern countries, there tend to be larger divides in main news source preference between people on the left and right of the ideological spectrum than between those with and without populist views.

In Spain, those on the left and right differ substantially in the outlet they cite as their main news source. Among those on the ideological right, Radio y Televisión Española (RTVE) is the most cited main news source, while people on the left most often name laSexta.

Where users place outlets’ ideologies, on the right and on the left

For many of the news outlets across the eight countries, people who use an outlet to get news tend to think the outlet is closer to their own left-right ideological position. In Spain, this is true for three outlets asked about: El Mundo, El Diario, and Público. For these outlets, news users on either the right or left tend to place them closer to their own ideology. For four news outlets – Televisión Española (TVE), Antena 3, El País and La Vanguardia – right-aligned and left-aligned news users generally agree on their left-right placement. ABC is not included in this analysis, because the outlet did not have a large enough sample of left or right users to analyze.

In general, where the public places an outlet tends to differ from where the average audience actually sits ideologically. For each of the news outlets asked about in the survey, the average audience (based on self-reported usage) tends to fall near the ideological center. People who have heard of each outlet, however, tend to place the outlet either farther to the left or farther to the right than the actual ideological position of the outlet’s audience.

This is true of many outlets in Spain: While their audiences are near the center, people who have heard of each news outlet tend to think the outlets lean slightly more to the right. TVE, for example, has an audience that sits at about the middle of the left-right spectrum (3.2 on the 0-to-6 scale), but when asked to place the outlet on the same left-right scale, people who have heard of TVE place it farther to the right (at 4.4).

Trust in news media outlets

In seven of the eight countries surveyed, the most trusted news outlet asked about is the public news organization in each country. The exception is Spain: While a majority of adults (57%) say they trust the public broadcaster TVE, 64% say the same about Antena 3, a private television station owned by Atresmedia.

As with trust in the news media generally, trust in specific outlets varies by populist leanings, with those who hold populist views expressing lower levels of trust than those who don’t.

In Spain, these differences are stark. For example, those with populist leanings are 30 percentage points less likely than those with non-populist views to say they trust TVE. However, trust is also divided along the left-right ideological spectrum in Spain – those who place themselves on the left of the 0-to-6 ideological scale are 42 percentage points less likely than people on the right to trust TVE.

Social media usage and views

Many people in Western Europe get news through social media, with Facebook cited as the most widely used platform for news.

A majority of adults in Spain (61%) get news on social media, including 43% who get news on social media daily. Facebook is the most common social network used for news. In Spain, young people (those 18 to 29 years old) are more likely to get news on social media daily than those 50 and older (65% vs. 32%).

About half or more social media news consumers in each of the eight countries surveyed say they are familiar with the sources they see on social media. Still, sizeable minorities say they typically do not pay attention to the source of the news they encounter there.

Social media news consumers in Spain are similar to other Western Europeans – 63% are familiar with the news sources they find on social media, but roughly a quarter (26%) do not pay attention to the sources there.

Find out more

Read the methodology and full report for more on Spain and the other seven Western European countries included in the survey. For global data on media habits and attitudes see the report “Publics Globally Want Unbiased News Coverage, but Are Divided on Whether Their News Media Deliver.”