British media is failing to give voters the full picture ahead of elections

Stephen Cushion and Roger Scully says that many in Wales rely on UK wide news to get their information.

When you tune in to the latest UK political news, it is often dominated by the Westminster bubble. This is not a problem as such, but with elections in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland to take place in May, there are important questions about the access people in the nations beyond England will have to news about the campaigns that affect them.

A new survey of people in Wales sheds some light on routine news consumption habits. It shows that many rely on news produced in England, or UK-wide news, which has limited information about Welsh affairs.

As a consequence, the latest survey reminds us that we have a democratic deficit in Wales: people are not regularly exposed to news about Welsh Assembly matters, despite the fact that it is responsible for key policy areas such as health and education.

 

 

Reader deficit

One of the most striking findings of the survey is the low number of people reading a newspaper produced in Wales – 5% or fewer. The Western Mail carries the most comprehensive coverage of the assembly, but the survey revealed that fewer than 4% regularly read it; when asked to name their main newspaper, just 1% of respondents said The Western Mail.

The Daily Mail, by contrast, is almost ten times more likely to be named as a main daily newspaper and is read regularly by four times more people in Wales than The Western Mail. Moreover, most of the newspapers produced in England reach a far greater proportion of people in Wales than the major titles reporting coverage of Welsh politics. A cursory flick through any of the English papers reveals that scant attention is paid to Wales, let alone the assembly.

 

 

Broadcasters in Wales, on the other hand, reach a far greater proportion of people than newspapers. BBC Wales Today is the most widely consumed – 37% of people frequently tune in – while 17% and 13% of people in Wales regularly watch ITV’s Wales Tonight or listen to BBC Radio Wales respectively.

 

UK vs the nations

The thirst for UK-wide broadcast news in Wales has not diminished in the 17 years since devolution began. The BBC News at Six or Ten is watched by nearly 37% of respondents regularly, while 30% of people tune into the BBC News channel. ITV’s Evening News or News at Ten and Sky News are viewed less often – 11% and 13% respectively – but still rank as key sources relative to other news produced in Wales. Despite these positive viewer numbers, however, content analysis of UK-wide broadcast programming has shown Wales generally, and the assembly specifically, represent only a tiny proportion of the news agenda.

 

 

The survey also found that 11% regularly rely on the internet for news – whether online sites or blogs and Twitter, with 27% using Facebook. We can only speculate about how far these sources are used for the specific purpose of finding news about the Welsh assembly, but the evidence suggests that most people rely on established media outlets online or social media – the BBC, say, or MailOnline – for news rather than seeking alternative sources.

Above all, the survey reveals the important role public service broadcasting has for people in Wales. Both the BBC and ITV have regulatory obligations to serve audiences in the nations and, to different degrees, supply important information about politics and public affairs in Wales.

But if we leave aside ITV’s evening bulletin and BBC Wales’ broadcast and online services, the survey showed few people regularly access news produced in Wales.

Devolution confusion

Media effects are notoriously difficult to measure, but when considering the number of people in Wales who are misinformed about the assembly’s powers compared to Westminster’s, it is difficult to overlook their reliance on UK-wide news.

In a 2014 BBC poll, 43% and 31% of respondents thought health and education respectively – two major areas of devolved control – were the UK government’s responsibility, while 42% of people wrongly believed policing was an assembly matter.

Although levels of education may help to explain some of the variance in political understanding, the devolution confusion was very likely compounded by the fact that the wider media culture is dominated by English concerns. Moreover, any exposure to political news they may have encountered is highly likely to have been about Westminster affairs.

Research has shown that UK broadcast news often gives limited context about the policy relevance of stories, with perhaps a fleeting mention of “in England” at the beginning of a package. But news is rarely delivered from a comparative perspective, so an English policy issue is interpreted for people in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

And yet, UK news could be made more relevant to the nations beyond England.

For example, parents in both Exeter and Edinburgh would surely find it interesting to know that while university tuition fees can cost £9,000 per year in England, students in Scotland do not pay. In complex policy areas, of course, communicating news about devolved politics and making it relevant for all UK audiences is a more challenging task.

As May’s devolved elections draw closer, this survey clearly highlights the need for people to be more regularly exposed to UK news about Welsh political affairs. But with debates about the EU referendum looming large, news about Wales could slip even further down the UK’s media agenda.

Stephen Cushion is a Reader at the School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies at Cardiff University. Roger Scully is Professor of Political Science at Cardiff University. This article first appeared on the Conversation: https://theconversation.com/british-media-is-failing-to-give-voters-the-full-picture-ahead-of-elections-57020

5 thoughts on “British media is failing to give voters the full picture ahead of elections

  1. “As May’s devolved elections draw closer, this survey clearly highlights the need for people to be more regularly exposed to UK news about Welsh political affairs.”

    The English taxpayers definitely should find out a lot more about how their money is being spent in Wales year after year. Make sure they know about that £14-15 billion annual deficit they have to keep covering and how poor the outcomes really are in Wales’ public services…

  2. Ah…I’m glad that you linked to that survey on the IWA site Roger. I had tried to comment on your own site but it remains inaccessible.

    There is one question where the survey asks which party I voted for in the 2015 General Election but then goes on to list….Welsh Labour, Welsh Conservatives etc. No one knows better than you how a misleading question can upset the responses and the answer to this question might easily be that I voted for none of the specifically Welsh parties, I voted for a UK party campaigning on UK issues.

    I think that more and more people get informed comment from well researched information available on various blogs but if you look at online news sites like Walesonline then you see that the “serious” news attracts few comments and is rarely on the “most read” list. Offer some opinion piece on the Welsh rugby team however and there is plenty of comment activity.

    In truth literacy levels in Wales are the lowest in the UK:-

    ” In England, only 16% were classified at Entry level or below,
    compared to 25% in Wales. The pattern within the Entry level category is
    similar, with two thirds at Entry level 3 and only a small proportion (7% in
    Wales; 5% in England) classified in the bottom two levels.”

    It’s quite possible that written news is inaccessible or undesirable to 1 in 4 Welsh adults but I do know of quite well educated people here in NW Wales who just ignore all Welsh news as “for people from round Cardiff”.

  3. It is dismal that only thirteen percent listen to news on Radio Wales, which, is probably the most accessible sauce of news of Wales. One problem is only 70% of people in Wales can hear Radio Wales on FM, large parts of mid and north Wales have no FM signal. Where as 98% can listen to Radio Four on FM.which carries London centeric news. Expanding digital coverage of Radio Wales to cover all of Wales has been a shambolic. Meanwhile dozens of London based stations have appeared on DAB radio that do not report on Wales.
    Radio Wales has been neglected it is much the same as it was in 1980. No new additional services have been added to it to attract younger or different audiences. Radio Ulster and Scotland get much higher listening figures and cover their countries on FM.
    Television news reporting of Wales has not increased in fifty years and is lost amongst hundreds of tv stations broadcasting to but not about Wales.
    There is news of Wales to be found on existing broadcasting, perhaps these need to be advertised much more.
    I do not accept J Jones views above that Welsh people are to thick to understand the news.

  4. “I do not accept J Jones views above that Welsh people are to thick to understand the news.”

    J.Jones didn’t say that people Welsh people were “thick”. He said that a high proportion had poor literacy skills as in:-

    That’s “TOO thick to understand…”
    SOURCE not SAUCE in ” the most accessible sauce of news of Wales.”
    It should read:-
    “One problem is “THAT” only 70% of people in Wales can hear Radio Wales on FM.”
    “to cover all of Wales has been a shambolic.” Should read “SHAMBLES”.

    In Wales it’s always someone else’s fault isn’t it Keith…usually England’s.

  5. @Keith Parry,

    It’s no use whinging about Radio Wales not being available in large swathes of mid Wales (and blaming it on Radio 4) when Radio Cymru is available crystal clear absolutely everywhere.

    Just like in the 80’s when they chose to deprive the whole of Wales of the most independent and ground breaking channel (Channel 4) and replace it with a channel that only 10% could understand (S4C)… once again the powers that be have decided that rather than attempting to address the huge democratic deficit that exists in Wales since devolution, they would rather fill our airwaves with niche Welsh language broadcasting.

    I also recall they tried to reserve one of the Freesat HD slots for S4C HD instead of Channel 4 HD but luckily even the rabid Welsh nationalists dominating media in Wales saw sense on that… well I say “saw sense”, it actually required the fact that S4C wasn’t broadcasting in HD to prevent them from essentially broadcasting the same channel again in low resolution on a specific HD slot.

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