Only 3.4% of U.S. journalists are Republicans: Survey

The variety of full-time American journalists who say they’re Republicans plummeted up to now decade, whereas Democrats in that occupation rose.

According to a brand new survey titled “The American Journalist Under Attack,” launched by Syracuse University’s S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, Republicans within the trade fell from 18% in 2002 and seven.1% in 2013 to three.4% in 2022.

That’s considerably decrease than the variety of American adults who say they’re Republicans (26%), in keeping with a 2022 ABC News/Washington Post ballot.



Democrats within the information trade noticed their ranks swell by eight share factors in 2022 to 36%.

The quantity is 9 share factors larger than the general Democrat inhabitants of 27%, in keeping with the ABC News/Washington Post ballot.

The new survey notes that the determine is the third-highest share of journalists figuring out as Democrats since 1971.

The research included different findings that coated varied subjects within the journalism office, together with instructional ranges, office satisfaction, shrinking newsrooms, median ages of reporters, ladies, minorities, sought-after coaching and social media.

According to the survey, 22% of the respondents stated journalism within the U.S. was headed in the fitting route, whereas 60.1% stated in any other case. Similar numbers of respondents stated the identical a decade in the past.  

When requested concerning the “most important problem facing journalism today,” the journalists talked about these points most frequently: declining public belief within the information media, shrinking native and group information protection, perceived bias and opinion journalism, faux information and disrupted enterprise fashions.

This survey resumes the collection of nationwide research of U.S. journalists launched in 1971 by sociologist John Johnstone. It continued in 1982, 1992, 2002 and 2013 by David Weaver, Cleve Wilhoit and their colleagues at Indiana University.

The new research was based mostly on a web-based survey with 1,600 U.S. journalists and carried out in early 2022.