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Black and white Democrats differ in their media diets, assessments of primaries – Pew Research Center

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In the fateful four days from the South Carolina primary through Super Tuesday that transformed the battle for the Democratic presidential nomination, one recurring media narrative was – and continues to be today – the strong support for Joe Biden among black voters, support some analysts credit with saving the former vice president’s candidacy.
Black voters constitute a core element of the Democratic Party (for example, in 2017, non-Hispanic black adults composed 19% of Democratic registered voters). A new survey conducted Feb. 18 to March 2, 2020, as part of Pew Research Center’s Election News Pathways project finds that there are some notable differences between white and black Democrats in both news consumption habits and assessments of recent political events and figures in the news, according to the survey of 10,300 U.S. adults who are members of the Center’s American Trends Panel.
Black Democrats and black independents who lean Democratic are considerably less likely than their white counterparts to operate in a “media bubble,” consuming political news only from outlets that have left-leaning audiences, according a November 2019 Pew Research Center survey. According to a new Center analysis, 12% do, compared with 23% of white Democrats.
In addition to differences in where and how closely they follow election news, black and white Democrats have somewhat differing views about key events and candidates in the 2020 campaign.
To analyze these survey questions by additional media habits and demographic characteristics, visit the interactive tool and access the dataset.
This analysis focuses on differences between black and white Democrats. To find out more about Hispanic Democrats, use our interactive data tool or read upcoming analyses from the Center.
An earlier report from the Center’s Pathways project revealed that about 20% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents and of Republicans and Republican leaners are in a media bubble – getting political news in a given week only from outlets (among 30 outlets asked about) predominantly used by people who align with them politically and ideologically. But differences emerge by race. Only 12% of black Democrats are in a media bubble of sources with left-leaning audiences, compared with about twice as many white Democrats (23%).
One way that black Democrats break out of the media bubble is that roughly a third (36%) get political news from Fox News, which, according to the Center’s survey data, has an audience that leans to the right politically. That contrasts sharply with the 17% of white Democrats who get political news from Fox.
In using sources for political news, black Democrats are also more inclined to turn to ABC News (53%) and CBS News (46%) than white Democrats (35% and 34%, respectively). White Democrats, however, are much more inclined to get political news from The New York Times (39%) than their black counterparts (12%). The same pattern holds for NPR (43% vs. 10%) and The Washington Post (32% vs. 13%).
In a separate question about the most common way people access political news, black Democrats express a higher reliance on local television (28%) than do white Democrats (10%), while white Democrats are more likely to get news through news websites or apps (32%, vs. 15% among black Democrats).
At least half of black and white Democrats say they are following news about the 2020 candidates very closely or fairly closely. But there is a notable variation within those levels of engagement. While about three-in-ten white Democrats (31%) say they are following this news very closely, that number drops by about half to 17% among black Democrats. Overall, 69% of white Democrats say they are following news about the candidates very or fairly closely, compared with 54% of black Democrats who say the same thing.
Along with following news about the 2020 candidates less closely, black Democrats and Democratic leaners also express somewhat less confidence than white Democrats that they understand what’s been happening in the Democratic primaries to date. That primary process, leading up to the time of the survey, included about a dozen candidates, crowded debate stages, two billionaire candidates flooding the airwaves with ads and an Iowa caucus marred by delayed and even disputed results.
Overall, 63% of black Democrats and Democratic leaners say they understand what’s been happening in the primaries very well or somewhat well, compared with nearly three-quarters (73%) of white Democrats. That includes 18% of black Democrats and 26% of white Democrats who say they understand it very well.
Those lower levels of certainty among black Democrats around the facts and events of the primaries may be related to perceptions about whether the delay in releasing the Feb. 3 Iowa Democratic caucus results was completely unintentional or at least partly intentional.
A majority of white Democrats (59%) say the snafu in Iowa was the result of unintentional problems and not major efforts to purposefully delay, compared with about three-in-ten (31%) of black Democrats who say the same. Instead, a plurality of black Democrats (42%) say they are not sure why the results were delayed, more than twice the percentage of white Democrats (20%) who also are unsure. The remaining 26% of black Democrats and 21% of white Democrats say that in addition to unintentional problems, there were also intentional efforts to delay the results.
For much of the latter half of February and first two days of March, when the survey was administered, Bernie Sanders was considered a front-runner for the Democratic nomination in the media narrative. (That narrative did start to shift after the results of the Feb. 29 South Carolina primary in which support among black Democrats helped drive Biden to a big victory – the tail end of the survey field time.)
When asked about news coverage of candidates in the past couple of weeks, both black and white Democrats selected Sanders as the recipient of the best coverage, including 42% of white Democrats and 37% of black Democrats. At the same time, however, 14% of black Democrats said Biden enjoyed the best coverage in that period, compared with a mere 5% of white Democrats who felt the same way about Biden’s coverage.
And when it comes to assessing the news about Trump in the past couple of weeks, majorities of all Democrats described it as very or mostly bad, including about six-in-ten black and white Democrats (61% and 59%, respectively). But black members of this group expressed less willingness to put Trump’s coverage in a favorable light. About one-in-ten black Democrats characterized news about Trump as mostly or very good (8%) in that period, compared with 17% of white Democrats.
These measures and more can be explored further in the Election News Pathways data tool, where all of the data associated with this project is available for public use.
Data from this analysis comes from surveys conducted Oct. 29 to Nov. 11, 2019, and Feb. 18 to March 2, 2020. See the survey questions and methodology for this analysis, or access the dataset.
Acknowledgments: The Election News Pathways project was made possible by The Pew Charitable Trusts. Pew Research Center is a subsidiary of The Pew Charitable Trusts, its primary funder. This initiative is a collaborative effort based on the input and analysis of a number of individuals and experts at Pew Research Center.
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ABOUT PEW RESEARCH CENTER Pew Research Center is a nonpartisan fact tank that informs the public about the issues, attitudes and trends shaping the world. It conducts public opinion polling, demographic research, media content analysis and other empirical social science research. Pew Research Center does not take policy positions. It is a subsidiary of The Pew Charitable Trusts.
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