A3 Book section, Chapters in research books
The Netherlands : Populism from Margins to the Mainstream (2024)


Schoor, C., Pöyhtäri, R., & Saresma, T. (2024). The Netherlands : Populism from Margins to the Mainstream. In J. Herkman, & E. Palonen (Eds.), Populism, Twitter and the European Public Sphere : Social Media Communication in the EP Elections 2019 (pp. 25-56). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-41737-5_2


JYU authors or editors


Publication details

All authors or editorsSchoor, Carola; Pöyhtäri, Reeta; Saresma, Tuija

Parent publicationPopulism, Twitter and the European Public Sphere : Social Media Communication in the EP Elections 2019

Parent publication editorsHerkman, Juha; Palonen, Emilia

ISBN978-3-031-41736-8

eISBN978-3-031-41737-5

Publication year2024

Pages range25-56

Number of pages in the book253

PublisherPalgrave Macmillan

Place of PublicationCham

Publication countrySwitzerland

Publication languageEnglish

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-41737-5_2

Publication open accessNot open

Publication channel open access

Publication is parallel published (JYX)https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/100178


Abstract

The chapter discusses the political context in the Netherlands during the 2019 EP elections and introduces the political communication environment of the country. Particular attention is given to the role of Twitter in Dutch political communication and populism in the country’s party field during the twenty-first century. The empirical Twitter analysis focuses on 11,397 tweets sent from 223 Twitter accounts by various political actors during a one-month period in May 2019. The analysis demonstrates that two-third of the tweets were sent from individual accounts and one-third from party accounts, indicating a personal orientation in the Dutch Twitter campaign. Actors affiliated with the populist radical right parties PVV and FvD were the most active tweeters, and these party affiliations also dominated retweeting and commenting activities, accompanied with actors affiliated with the populist left SP. The most popular themes in tweets contained the elections and EU in general, but the parties discussed their rivals surprisingly often. This echoed a strong polarisation in the Dutch election campaign, which was also indicated in topic modelling and network analysis. Even if populist and Eurosceptic radical parties remained fringe compared to moderate pro-European and critical Europeanist mainstream parties, populist antagonism as such seems to become mainstream in Dutch party field.


Keywordspoliticianspolitical partiesright wing partiespopulismsocial media


Contributing organizations


Related projects


Ministry reportingYes

VIRTA submission year2024

Preliminary JUFO rating2


Last updated on 2025-12-03 at 21:46