Identity Collapse? Realignment of Taiwanese Voters in the 2024
Presidential Elections on Social Media
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2310.07739v1
- Date: Tue, 10 Oct 2023 17:52:27 GMT
- Title: Identity Collapse? Realignment of Taiwanese Voters in the 2024
Presidential Elections on Social Media
- Authors: Ho-Chun Herbert Chang, Sunny Fang
- Abstract summary: The 2024 Taiwanese Presidential Election is not just a critical geopolitical event, it also engages with long-standing debate in politics.
We analyze user (predominantly Taiwanese) discourse and engagement along the axes of national identity, issue topic, and partisan alignment.
We discuss how the dissolution of Taiwan's single-issue society may not just lead to more viable candidates and multi-issue discourse, but the misalignment of national and partisan identity may heal deep-seated partisan cleavages.
- Score: 2.5835347022640254
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: The 2024 Taiwanese Presidential Election is not just a critical geopolitical
event, it also engages with long-standing debate in politics regarding the
factors that lead to the rise of new political parties and candidates. In 2021,
the Economist called Taiwan "the most dangerous place on earth" due to its
critical role in a fragile supply chain. Additionally, a four-candidate race
has emerged in a traditionally bipartisan election which begs the question: how
will voters realign given the choice of four candidates? Leveraging more than a
million posts on social media, we analyze user (predominantly Taiwanese)
discourse and engagement along the axes of national identity, issue topic, and
partisan alignment. Results reveal alternative candidates (Ko and Gou) draw
attention from the fringes rather than the center relative to national
identity, and traditional candidates derive more engagement from the
traditional media and salience to geopolitical issues. Crucially, in-group
references generate more engagement than out-group references, contrary to
Western-based studies. We discuss how the dissolution of Taiwan's single-issue
society may not just lead to more viable candidates and multi-issue discourse,
but the misalignment of national and partisan identity may heal deep-seated
partisan cleavages.
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