Politicization of Government Social Media Communication: A Linguistic Framework and Case Study

Social media communication of government agencies should ideally be truthful and impartial to sustain public trust in government and support democratic goals. However, the politicization of agencies may harm the benefits that impartial and engaged communication brings. In this study, we provide a li...

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Main Authors: Nic DePaula, Sten Hansson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-04-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051251333486
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author Nic DePaula
Sten Hansson
author_facet Nic DePaula
Sten Hansson
author_sort Nic DePaula
collection DOAJ
description Social media communication of government agencies should ideally be truthful and impartial to sustain public trust in government and support democratic goals. However, the politicization of agencies may harm the benefits that impartial and engaged communication brings. In this study, we provide a linguistic framework for analyzing how agency politicization is reflected in the language of government social media communication by asking: How does the agency (1) use speech acts (e.g., commands, requests), (2) talk about itself and others, (3) refer to statistical and scientific information, and (4) express positive and negative sentiment? We demonstrate the application of the framework by conducting a case study of the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s messaging on Twitter across administrations with distinct ideological alignments between the agency and its top administrator. The analysis shows that (1) requests and statistical information were used substantially more under the administrator more aligned with the agency mission; (2) expressive speech acts were used more often during the administration less aligned with the agency mission; and (3) posts were generally positive but more so under the administration less aligned with the agency mission, possibly to counteract increased public criticism. We discuss the results in relation to theories of politicization and government communication, and the implications for citizens and public sector communicators using social media sites.
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spelling doaj-art-87cd2cfdd4bc4ee9a474e1613cb1e22a2025-08-20T01:48:29ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512025-04-011110.1177/20563051251333486Politicization of Government Social Media Communication: A Linguistic Framework and Case StudyNic DePaula0Sten Hansson1SUNY Polytechnic Institute, USAUniversity of Tartu, EstoniaSocial media communication of government agencies should ideally be truthful and impartial to sustain public trust in government and support democratic goals. However, the politicization of agencies may harm the benefits that impartial and engaged communication brings. In this study, we provide a linguistic framework for analyzing how agency politicization is reflected in the language of government social media communication by asking: How does the agency (1) use speech acts (e.g., commands, requests), (2) talk about itself and others, (3) refer to statistical and scientific information, and (4) express positive and negative sentiment? We demonstrate the application of the framework by conducting a case study of the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s messaging on Twitter across administrations with distinct ideological alignments between the agency and its top administrator. The analysis shows that (1) requests and statistical information were used substantially more under the administrator more aligned with the agency mission; (2) expressive speech acts were used more often during the administration less aligned with the agency mission; and (3) posts were generally positive but more so under the administration less aligned with the agency mission, possibly to counteract increased public criticism. We discuss the results in relation to theories of politicization and government communication, and the implications for citizens and public sector communicators using social media sites.https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051251333486
spellingShingle Nic DePaula
Sten Hansson
Politicization of Government Social Media Communication: A Linguistic Framework and Case Study
Social Media + Society
title Politicization of Government Social Media Communication: A Linguistic Framework and Case Study
title_full Politicization of Government Social Media Communication: A Linguistic Framework and Case Study
title_fullStr Politicization of Government Social Media Communication: A Linguistic Framework and Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Politicization of Government Social Media Communication: A Linguistic Framework and Case Study
title_short Politicization of Government Social Media Communication: A Linguistic Framework and Case Study
title_sort politicization of government social media communication a linguistic framework and case study
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051251333486
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