When the President Tweets: Exploring the Normative Tensions of Contemporary Presidential Communication

Authors

  • Joshua M. Scacco University of South Florida
  • Lauren Copeland Baldwin Wallace University
  • Amy B. Becker Loyola University Maryland
  • Julia Berger University of Utah

Keywords:

political communication, American presidency, presidential communication, norms, Twitter, Donald Trump

Abstract

Presidential communication has evolved from mass-focused messaging to include more tailored appeals across multiple media platforms. Although researchers have documented how presidents use media and have catalogued some institutional shifts due to communication technologies, we know surprisingly little about public opinion related to presidential communication style. This blind spot is important given the election and presidency of Donald Trump, whose unique use of Twitter challenges traditional norms of presidential communication. In two separate studies, we assess the public’s normative beliefs toward President Trump’s use of Twitter. Using statewide survey data collected in 2017 and national-level survey data collected in 2019, we assess the normative tensions between deliberative and liberal individualistic presidential communication. The findings illuminate a public grappling with these tensions in evaluating the frequency and appropriateness of the president’s tweets.

Author Biographies

Joshua M. Scacco, University of South Florida

Joshua M. Scacco (PhD, University of Texas at Austin, 2014) is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication. He also serves as a Faculty Research Associate with the award-winning Center for Media Engagement at the University of Texas at Austin. He specializes in political communication, media content and effects, and quantitative research methods. 

Lauren Copeland, Baldwin Wallace University

Dr. Lauren Copeland is a self-described “politics and data science nerd,” with research activities that lie at the intersection of political communication, political behavior and public opinion, and a current focus on the relationship between digital media use and political participation. She earned both a doctorate and Master of Arts in political science from University of California, Santa Barbara and a Bachelor of Arts from DePaul University in Chicago.

Amy B. Becker, Loyola University Maryland

I'm an associate professor in the Department of Communication at Loyola University Maryland. My research focuses on public opinion, political entertainment and comedy, public engagement with science, and new media. I teach courses on communication theory, political communication, popular culture, political entertainment, and the Internet and emerging media.

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Published

2020-05-28

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Articles