A new nine-month Media Matters study of Facebook pages that regularly post about American political news looked at two different measures of performance and found that right-leaning pages outperformed left-leaning pages or performed similarly to them. Right-leaning pages consistently earned more average weekly interactions than left-leaning pages, while both types of pages earned similar engagement rates -- a measure of performance that accounts for interactions as well as numbers of page likes and posts.
Key findings include:
- Right-leaning pages earned more interactions than left-leaning and nonaligned pages. Between January 1 and September 30, right-leaning Facebook pages tallied more than 6 billion interactions (reactions, comments, shares), or 43% of total interactions earned by pages posting about American political news, despite accounting for only 26% of posts.
- Pages without a political alignment drew fewer interactions even though they created the most total posts. Our group of nonaligned pages, many of them from traditional media outlets, posted more than 3.2 million times -- roughly 59% of total posts -- yet accounted for just 30% of total interactions.
- Left-leaning pages were less active than right-leaning or nonaligned pages. These pages posted the least, had the fewest number of page likes, and earned the fewest interactions.
- Right-leaning and left-leaning pages had similar interaction rates, a performance metric that measures engagement of a Facebook page in relation to the number of page likes and how frequently it shares posts. In other words, although right-leaning pages drew more interactions overall, they had similar performance to left-leaning pages when accounting for left-leaning pages' fewer page likes and posts.