Trolled out of office: UBC report examines role of online abuse against politicians and democracy - Action News
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British Columbia

Trolled out of office: UBC report examines role of online abuse against politicians and democracy

Politicians can face a lot of abuse on the internet, but a new University of British Columbia report explains how that abuse can threaten our democracies and stifle diverse representation.

Researchers analyzed one million tweets directed at political candidates in the 2019 federal election

Researchers at the University of British Columbia analyzed over one million tweets directed at politicians during the 2019 federal election for online harassment in the form of personal attacks and death threats. (Thomas White/Reuters)

A new report from researchers at the University of British Columbia attemptsto quantify the amount of online hate and harassment received by political candidates.

While there is plenty of anecdotal evidence to suggest politicians are targets of a lot of online harassment, historian and public policy professorHeidi Tworekand her co-researcher Chris Tenove wanted to gather more concrete evidence by analyzing online messaging directed at political candidatesduring theduring the 2019 federal election.

The team started by looking at3,000 tweets and coding them as positive, neutral, and betweenlow, medium, and high negativity. They also interviewedpolitical candidatesto see how they would classify a tweet.

Thetweets that were coded by readers' perceptionswere then run through a digital programso the remainder of the tweetscould be analyzed by computer.

1 million tweets analyzed

After analyzing one million tweets directed at political candidates, the results were unsurprising, said Tworek.

"We found perhaps unsurprising [to]people who spenttime on Twitter it wasn't a particularly positive place," Tworek said.

Only seven per cent of tweets directed at politicians were unambiguously positive. A vastmajority of the tweets were negative.

"We didn't mean things that engaged in robust policy discussion, but rather things that were attacking people personally on the basis of their background, gender, race, sexuality and so on," she said.

About 40 per cent of tweets directed at candidates wereuncivil, and 16 per cent of all tweets were abusiveor potentially threatening.

Certain criteria made candidates more susceptible

There were certain criteria that made candidates more susceptibleto online hatred, Tworek said.

The main one was prominence.

"The top 10 people who received tweets in our study received about 61 per cent of all of the negative abuse," she said.

Women and racialized candidates did not necessarily receivehigher rates of incivility online, the report concluded, but the harassment was also accompanied by lived experiences of threat, harassment, or marginalization offline.

Over the years, MP Jenny Kwan has received her share of online hate and anonymous messages. (Ashley Burke/CBC)

In 2019, Vancouver MP Jenny Kwan told CBC News thatin addition to a torrent of online hate, hertires were slashed and her office window was shattered by unknown vandals when she was a provincial MLA in B.C.

A chilling effect on political participation

Tworek says this kind of online abuse can have a chilling effect on democracy.

Various groups of people may look at what is happening online andchoose not to engage especially people from underrepresented groups who seehow certain people are targeted on Twitter when they are political candidates. These onlookers may then decide based on what they're seeing on Twitter that they don't want to enter the political arena.

Tworek has a number of suggestions to improve political discourse.

For one, political candidates can have a robust strategy on how to deal with online harassment, including posting rules of engagement and blocking and muting certain voices if necessary.

Political parties should provide more support, especially to candidates who have less experience and are more likely to be targeted.

Governments should clarify laws and detail what police action can be taken, especially when the harassment reaches threatening levels.

Finally, she says, there are glimmers of positivity. She notes that candidates themselves can stand in solidarity against bullying, such aswhen rival candidatescame out in support ofB.C. Green candidate Nicola Spurling, who had beentargeted for her gender identity.

"We can see, I think, instances and glimmers of positivity already where candidates push back against this," Tworek said.

"That's important. It certainly can look different."

With files from On The Coast