China Defenders From Abroad: Exploring Pro-China Foreign Political Influencers on X/Twitter

Political influencers are social media users who attempt to shape others’ political attitudes and behaviors through personal influences. While prior research has mainly examined political influencers in Western democracies, this study shifts attention to an international context, focusing on the sel...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Leiyuan Tian, Fan Liang, Zhao Alexandre Huang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-07-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051251358526
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849429555556646912
author Leiyuan Tian
Fan Liang
Zhao Alexandre Huang
author_facet Leiyuan Tian
Fan Liang
Zhao Alexandre Huang
author_sort Leiyuan Tian
collection DOAJ
description Political influencers are social media users who attempt to shape others’ political attitudes and behaviors through personal influences. While prior research has mainly examined political influencers in Western democracies, this study shifts attention to an international context, focusing on the self-presentation strategies and discursive frames used by non-Chinese political influencers who support China on Twitter (X). Through a thematic analysis of online profiles and a frame analysis of 3000 tweets by 10 influencers, we identified two self-presentation strategies: “the explorer,” which highlights the influencer’s attractiveness, closeness, and passionate authenticity, and “the expert,” which emphasizes expertise and intellectual authenticity. We further propose a typology of four frames used by the influencers to defend or promote China: “Western Hypocrisy,” which criticizes Western double standards; “Western Threat,” which presents the West as a major threat to global security and growth; “System Superiority,” which promotes China’s political model against Western models; and “Common Destiny,” which envisions a prosperous future shared by China’s global partners. We argue that although the political affiliations of these influencers remain ambiguous and difficult to determine, they have become de facto contributors to China’s quest for global reputation in a digital age.
format Article
id doaj-art-e3a10883d76e4224abbdc483534cce9e
institution Kabale University
issn 2056-3051
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher SAGE Publishing
record_format Article
series Social Media + Society
spelling doaj-art-e3a10883d76e4224abbdc483534cce9e2025-08-20T03:28:20ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512025-07-011110.1177/20563051251358526China Defenders From Abroad: Exploring Pro-China Foreign Political Influencers on X/TwitterLeiyuan Tian0Fan Liang1Zhao Alexandre Huang2The London School of Economics and Political Science, UKDuke Kunshan University, ChinaUniversité Gustave Eiffel, FrancePolitical influencers are social media users who attempt to shape others’ political attitudes and behaviors through personal influences. While prior research has mainly examined political influencers in Western democracies, this study shifts attention to an international context, focusing on the self-presentation strategies and discursive frames used by non-Chinese political influencers who support China on Twitter (X). Through a thematic analysis of online profiles and a frame analysis of 3000 tweets by 10 influencers, we identified two self-presentation strategies: “the explorer,” which highlights the influencer’s attractiveness, closeness, and passionate authenticity, and “the expert,” which emphasizes expertise and intellectual authenticity. We further propose a typology of four frames used by the influencers to defend or promote China: “Western Hypocrisy,” which criticizes Western double standards; “Western Threat,” which presents the West as a major threat to global security and growth; “System Superiority,” which promotes China’s political model against Western models; and “Common Destiny,” which envisions a prosperous future shared by China’s global partners. We argue that although the political affiliations of these influencers remain ambiguous and difficult to determine, they have become de facto contributors to China’s quest for global reputation in a digital age.https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051251358526
spellingShingle Leiyuan Tian
Fan Liang
Zhao Alexandre Huang
China Defenders From Abroad: Exploring Pro-China Foreign Political Influencers on X/Twitter
Social Media + Society
title China Defenders From Abroad: Exploring Pro-China Foreign Political Influencers on X/Twitter
title_full China Defenders From Abroad: Exploring Pro-China Foreign Political Influencers on X/Twitter
title_fullStr China Defenders From Abroad: Exploring Pro-China Foreign Political Influencers on X/Twitter
title_full_unstemmed China Defenders From Abroad: Exploring Pro-China Foreign Political Influencers on X/Twitter
title_short China Defenders From Abroad: Exploring Pro-China Foreign Political Influencers on X/Twitter
title_sort china defenders from abroad exploring pro china foreign political influencers on x twitter
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051251358526
work_keys_str_mv AT leiyuantian chinadefendersfromabroadexploringprochinaforeignpoliticalinfluencersonxtwitter
AT fanliang chinadefendersfromabroadexploringprochinaforeignpoliticalinfluencersonxtwitter
AT zhaoalexandrehuang chinadefendersfromabroadexploringprochinaforeignpoliticalinfluencersonxtwitter