‘Alien Elections’: Neighboring State News on the 2018 Russian Presidential Elections

  • Anastasia Kazun
  • Anastasia Kazun
  • Пашахин Pashakhin
Keywords: media, news, Russian presidential elections, Crimea, topic modeling, political personalization

Abstract

News media tend to reflect voices in the political establishment while covering international events. Is it still true when almost half of the national audience speak the language of the country featured in the coverage? In this paper, we present an analysis of 19.5k news messages collected from Russian-language Ukrainian news outlets covering the 2018 presidential elections in Russia. Using a mixed-method approach (topic modeling and qualitative reading), we identify key topics and stories and evaluate the extent of personalization in the election coverage. We find three central angles: the focus on polls and election results, election preparations in Crimea, and Vladimir Putin’s victory. The elections are linked predominantly to Crimean issues through the date of the elections, each candidate’s stance on the subject, the election management in the region, and other countries’ reactions to the results. Such coverage has an accusatory bias; it stresses the legal status of the Crimean referendum and the Russian authorities’ actions and reports the pressures on locals by authorities, especially the Crimean Tatars. Not linked directly to Crimea, other angles are less emotionally charged. Political personalization of the discussion has a contradictory nature. On one hand, the overwhelming majority of the messages mention public figures. On the other hand, the coverage of the figures is limited and omits their traits. Moreover, at times, public figures are replaced by non-personalized symbols (e.g., Kremlin, Russian invaders). However, if the former’s coverage is predominantly neutral, the latter’s coverage is more prone to negative and loaded statements.

Author Biographies

Anastasia Kazun

PhD, Senior Research Fellow, Laboratory for Studies in Economic Sociology, Senior Lecturer, the Faculty of Social
Sciences, National Research University Higher School of Economics. Address: 11 Myasnitskaya str., 101000, Moscow, Russian Federation.

Anastasia Kazun

PhD, Senior Research Fellow, Laboratory for Studies in Economic Sociology, Senior Lecturer, the Faculty of Social
Sciences, National Research University Higher School of Economics. Address: 11 Myasnitskaya str., 101000, Moscow, Russian Federation.

Пашахин Pashakhin

PhD Student, Research Assistant, the Laboratory for Social and Cognitive Informatics, National Research University Higher School of Economics. Address: 55/2 Sedova str., 190008, St. Petersburg, Russian Federation.

Published
2021-02-01
How to Cite
KazunA., KazunA., & PashakhinП. (2021). ‘Alien Elections’: Neighboring State News on the 2018 Russian Presidential Elections. Journal of Economic Sociology, 22(1), 71-91. Retrieved from https://tpjournal.hse.ru/index.php/ecsoc/article/view/12037
Section
Beyond Borders