British blogs: A waste of time?
Sunday, 20 February 2005, 09:40
A recent Times article has given the British political blogosphere some much-needed attention — including some from some rather unsavoury sources.
While Iain Duncan-Smith fantasises about blogs saving the Tories, Nosemonkey of Europhobia thinks the British blogosphere is a largely pointless waste of time.
I fear Nosemonkey may be right. Although Iain Duncan-Smith doesn’t seem to grasp this, it’s impossible to understand the success of political blogging in the United States without taking account of the particular political context in which it operates.
First, blogging has filled a niche that the particular structure American journalism has left open: partisan reporting. The ideology of journalism that has emerged in the United States since the 19th century is professional “objectivity“. A widely-held norm of objectivity lends itself to criticism based on charges of partisan bias.
American journalism’s notion of objectivity has an economic basis. American print journalism is based on a system of regional monopolies that attempt to be slavishly centrist in order to attract the widest possible audience. Broadcasting is still dominated by the networks which operate in a similar way, although the recent advent of cable and satellite channels is challenging that.
British mainstream journalism, by contrast, is relatively more diverse. The big media are national in scope and compete in a highly competitive market for eyeballs that they must segment along partisan lines to survive. Brits understand this instinctively. They know that their journalism is biased. People who read the Daily Mail or the Guardian understand that they are getting a particular point of view. Brits are accustomed to a partisan media, and know how to decode the news accordingly. A blog screaming about the manifold biases of the Sun isn’t telling us anything we don’t already know.
For the same reason, there is less need in Britain for additional partisan view points — the British “MSM” is organised in a way that provides them. There’s not much room for a blogger to rant about the views of the Guardian when Telegraph columnists already do it far more effectively for a huge audience.
The media scalp-hunting that has characterised American bloggers’ most celebrated successes occur all the time in Britain — within the mainstream media. The Andrew Gillian and Piers Morgan stories might have been conservative blogger scalps if their errors of fact-checking had occurred in the United States. The tabloids also provide the political pseudo-scandals that might have emerged on blogs in the United States: think Chris Bryant.
A second weakness of the British blogosphere is that electoral politics in Britain are far less media-dependent than in the United States. In contrast to America’s lengthy, national, extensive and media-driven electoral campaigns fought over geographically huge constituencies, Britain’s short general election campaigns are still fought largely at the level of relatively small parliamentary constituencies. Retail politics — leaflets in letterboxes and doorstep canvassing — dominate campaigns.
Rather than months of media mudslinging providing grist for the blogger mill, British general elections trigger strict impartiallity rules in broadcasting.
The lack of expensive broadcast campaigning also means that campaign finance is also less of a battleground than it is in the United States. A blog-driven grassroots fundraising effort like the celebrated efforts of Howard Dean or Ben Chander is therefore unlikely to occur here.
Finally, there are sheer numbers. Britain has a similar (but still slightly lower) level of Internet penetration to the United States’. But relative numbers are meaningless: in blogging, it’s absolute numbers matter. The blogosphere network works by having a large number of nodes (ie readers) who can contribute to the distributed information-gathering structure that makes blogs effective.
The big American political blogs are predominantly national in scope.
An effective national sub-blogosphere may therefore require a critical mass that Britain alone may not be big enough to deliver. With a popuation of 60 million, Britain is only about the size of the three biggest American states combined.
To attract a potential internet-user population of the same order of magnitude, a sub-blogosphere would have to emerge at the pan-European level. But language differences alone make that unlikely.
But before you dispair, go check out the UK Political Blogs aggregator and add your favourites to Tim Worstall’s laudable BritBlog Roundup project.
Entry Filed under: Blogs
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8 Comments Add some more of your own
1. Tim Worstall | 20 February 2005 at 1057
This is very good indeed. Im not sure I actually agree with the analysis but certainly think it possible. I shall be adding it to the roundup.
2. Ken | 20 February 2005 at 1117
Much to agree with, and thought provoking.
3. Alex | 20 February 2005 at 1849
There’s no reason why blogspace will not exist outside the British press for exactly the opposite reasons that it exists in the US. In the US press, there’s a problem of false balance and dullness. Hence blogs go for the blood and thunder. It’s a bland stack of burgers and cheese fries without flavour, until you pour blogsauce on it.
In Britain, much of the press is nakedly partisan and frankly vicious – the problem is not to add chilli, it’s to add meat and flavour. Think of it as a cheap curry – plenty of spice but not much substance without a few chunks of blog chop and fat in the stew.
4. Alex | 20 February 2005 at 1851
PS, am I the unsavoury source/sauce or is it Freerepublic(an).com?
5. alan | 20 February 2005 at 1924
Interesting analysis of UK blogging but there are aspects in UK not covered by US blogging
for instance UK MPs are beginning to set up their own blogs eg Boris johnston which might give a unique ability of small numbers in UK to communicate more effectively with MPS, unlike in USA which has too large a community of bloggers for much success
also blogs seem to give (relatively) ordinary people chance to express views that otherwise not able to
alan
6. Rich | 22 February 2005 at 0155
Interesting analysis. Have been wanting to look into blogging in Britain to see how they compare to those in the U.S. Let me note, though, that you are way off-base if you think the American media is non-partisan! It is very liberal (at least to me) and has been on a Bush-bashing binge for the last 4 years. Of course, since George W. is not the most popular person “over there”, this may be seen as “fair reporting”. It is not. It just seems to me that the media, more often than not, puts a liberal spin on pretty much everything; making conservatives look like nuts. Maybe we are, but rather than spinning a story, can’t we just report all the facts rather than massaging it (depending on your political bent)into what we’d like it to be?
7. Martin Stabe | 22 February 2005 at 0747
Rich,
I didn’t say or mean to imply that American journalism is actually objective, only that it claims to be and is not overtly partisan the way it is here in Britain.
The fact that you are making this comment about the American media being “liberal” proves my point. This is something many people in the United States argue about. But the question of media bias is not an issue in the same way in Britain. Everybody knows the Guardian and the Independent are liberal while the Telegraph and the Sun are conservative. It’s no shock to anyone.
In broadcasting, however, it gets more complicated, because the BBC is supposed to objective, American-style. It’s no surprise, then, that one of Britian’s biggest blogs is one that accuses the BBC of being biased!
8. Monjo | 22 February 2005 at 1206
I fundamentally disagree. Firstly, blogs had a virtual 0 per cent impact on the November election in the US. Secondly, if political blogging is bigger in the US it is because their Presidential campaigns started a year ago (forget population sizes); the UK general election process hasnt started yet and will be very short.
The Sun is not conservative “It woz the Sun wot won it” after their 1996/7 switch to Labour.
Most interest in US political blogs attratcs people who already have that bias, they also attract many foreign visits because the US election is globally more important than the UK one – so UK political blogs wont be of as much international interest.
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