La popularidad de los políticos españoles en youtube antes y durante el covid-19

  1. Víctor Cerdán Martínez 1
  1. 1 Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España
Revista:
Revista Inclusiones: Revista de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales

ISSN: 0719-4706

Any de publicació: 2021

Títol de l'exemplar: Comunicación Actual, Ámbitos y Nuevas Tendencias

Volum: 8

Número: 8

Pàgines: 62-73

Tipus: Article

Altres publicacions en: Revista Inclusiones: Revista de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales

Resum

On March 14, 2020, the Government of Spain declared a state of alarm intending to stop the expansion of Covid-19. The measures lasted for three months until reaching the so-called “new normal.” Spanish citizens, besides staying informed through traditional media, have viewed political audiovisual content on YouTube during the pandemic, giving more preference to some politicians than others. This research uses YouTube search data to compare the popularity of the four politicians with the highest voting intention in Spain: Pedro Sánchez (PSOE), Pablo Casado (PP), Santiago Abascal (VOX) and Pablo Iglesias (Podemos) before and during the pandemic. The results show a trend change in the popularity of Spanish politicians. While before the health crisis Santiago Abascal, got the best search average (14.7), after the state of alarm Pedro Sánchez, current president of the government, is the most wanted politician (7.3), followed closely by Pablo Iglesias (6.9), vice president of the government. The regression analysis shows that there is no significant correlation between any of the politicians during the pandemic period. We conclude that the Covid-19 pandemic, to date, has increased the popularity on YouTube of those politicians that are in the government and have penalized those who are in opposition (Casado and Abascal). Also noteworthy is the low correlation between the searches for Pablo Iglesias and Pedro Sánchez on YouTube (R² = 0.0008) during the pandemic, suggesting that both politicians use very different communication strategies in the media, despite governing together