From the conventions to the eve of the final presidential debate, Barack Obama and Mitt Romney have received more negative than positive coverage from the mainstream news media, but social media—particularly Twitter—has been even harsher, according to a report by Pew Research.

For example, from August 27 to October 21, 2012, 62% of the narratives about Mitt Romney published via Facebook were negative in tone, compared with 38% of those published via the mainstream media. Discussions about President Obama via Facebook were negative 53% of the time, whereas those in the mainstream media were negative about 30% of the time.

Below, additional findings from "Winning the Media Campaign 2012," by the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism.

Twitter generated the most negative content. "Every week on Twitter resembled the worst week for each candidate in the mainstream press," Pew wrote.

Negative Twitter discussions about Romney outpaced positive ones some 42 percentage points over the eight-week study period. For Obama, negative messages outnumbered positive ones by 20 points.

In social media (e.g., Twitter, Facebook, and blogs), the narrative about both men has been "relentlessly negative" and relatively unmoved by campaign events that have shifted the mainstream narrative, Pew found.

Video Sharing via Social Networks

More than one-half (55%) of registered voters who use the Internet have watched political videos online this election season, with many of those videos discovered via social networking sites, according to separate research by Pew.

Overall, 62% of Internet-using registered voters have had others recommend online videos for them to watch related to the election or to politics.

Among Internet-using registered voters, video recommendations have come from various sources, including the following: 

  • Social networks: 40% have had other people recommend election- or politics-related online videos for them to watch via posting on a social networking site.
  • Word-of-mouth: 36% have had other people recommend election- or politics-related online videos by telling them about them in person.
  • Email or text: 32% have had other people recommend election- or politics-related online videos by sending an email or text message. 

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Romney, Obama, and Politics: 'Relentlessly Negative' Social Media; Video-Sharing Trends

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