Presidential Framing in the 21st Century News Media

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A01=Jennifer Rose Hopper
Affordable Care Act
AMA's House
AMA’s House
American Politics
American Presidency
Author_Jennifer Rose Hopper
Category=GTC
Category=JBCT
Category=JP
Category=JPQ
Category=JPWC
CNN's Coverage
CNN’s Coverage
comparative health policy framing
Death Panels
Dropped Plans
elite influence public opinion
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
executive communication strategies
Framing
Framing Contest
Health Care Reform
Health Policy
Individual Mandate
Internal Revenue Service
media agenda setting
Media and Politics
NBC News
News Media
Obama Administration's Effort
Obama Administration’s Effort
Obama Frame
Obama Team
Obamacare
Overreach: Leadership in the Obama Presidency
Partisan News Sources
partisan polarization effects
Penalty Frame
policy narrative analysis
Political Communication
PPACA
Presidential Frame Refraction
Presidential Framing
Presidential Framing Resilience
presidential media influence case studies
Public Policy
Secretary Sebelius
Socialized Medicine
Sunday Morning News Programs
Sunday News Shows
Tax Frame
The Development of the American Presidency
USA Patriot Act

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138202368
  • Weight: 480g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jan 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act came into existence at a time when the president’s ability to lead the public was in question, political polarization had intensified, and the media environment appeared ever more fragmented, fast-moving, and resistant to control. Under such circumstances, how can contemporary American presidents such as Barack Obama build and maintain support for themselves and their policies, particularly as controversies arise?

Using case studies of major contests over how key elements of the Affordable Care Act would be framed, and analysis of how those frames fared in influential and popular U.S. news sources, Hopper examines the conditions under which the president can effectively shape public debates today. She argues that despite the difficult political and communications context, the president retains substantial advantages in framing major controversial issues for the media and the public. These presidential framing advantages are conditional, however, and Hopper explores the factors that help make presidential frames more or less likely to gain hold in the news today. More so than in the past, an element of unpredictability in this news environment means that in pursuing favorable messaging, the president and his surrogates may also generate some unintentional consequences in how issues are portrayed to the public. Presidential frames can evolve with unfolding events to take on new meanings and applications, a process facilitated alternately by supporters, opponents, and media actors. Still, media figures and political opponents remain largely reactive to presidential communications, even as some seek to publicize and exploit weaknesses in the administration’s narratives. A close look at these recent cases casts new light on the scholarly debate surrounding the president’s ability to persuasively communicate and challenges conventional wisdom that the 21st century media largely present an unmanageable news environment for the White House.

Presidential Framing in the 21st Century News Media engages with current events in American politics, focusing on the Obama Administration and the Affordable Care Act, while also reflecting upon the state of the American presidency, the news media, and the public in ways that have substantial implications for all of these actors, not merely in the present, but into the future, making it a compelling read for scholars of Political Science, Media Studies, Communication Studies, and Public Policy.

Jennifer Rose Hopper is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Southern Connecticut State University, where she specializes in the American presidency, mass media, and political communication. Professor Hopper teaches courses on U.S. national political institutions, including Congress, the presidency, and the news media, as well as courses focused on the broader political environment and studying political parties, interest groups, social movements, and public policy.

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