Angry Posts Mobilize: Emotional Communication and Online
Mobilization in the Facebook Pages of Western European Right-Wing
Populist Leaders
Paolo Gerbaudo
Ciro Clemente De Falco
Giulia Giorgi
Silvia Keeling
Antonia Murolo
Federica Nunziata
https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051231163
Abstract
The rise of right-wing populists in Western Europe has often been
linked to their ability to exploit social media affordances to fuel
anger. While scholarship has already examined the emotional
dimension of the populist right’s online communication, with some
researchers studying specifically the fuelling of anger among social
media users, we still lack empirical proof of the mobilizational
effectiveness of what we describe as “anger-triggering
communication.” To explore this question, in this article, we
develop a statistical and topic analysis of right-wing populists’
Facebook pages in Italy, France, Spain, and Germany during the 2019
European Union (EU) election campaign. We find that (a) right-wing
populists on Facebook have a significantly higher number of “Angry”
Facebook reactions per post compared to their political adversaries;
(b) there is a positive and significant effect of the number of
Angry reactions on the number of times a post is shared; (c) Angry
reactions and Shares are overrepresented in posts on immigration and
security, but anger-fuelled mobilization is not limited to these
topics. These findings contribute to the scholarship on social
media, emotional communication, and populism, adding insights on the
mobilizational effectiveness of negative campaigning. The article
highlights that stoking public anger, especially around
controversial issues such as immigration and security, is a
rewarding tactic because it increases motivational strength, and
contributes to triggering high-threshold interactions such as
sharing, which, in turn, are key for achieving virality in the
diffusion of political messages.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/20563051231163327