Article (Scientific journals)
Is Fact-Checking Politically Neutral? Asymmetries in How U.S. Fact-Checking Organizations Pick Up False Statements Mentioning Political Elites
CHUAI, Yuwei; Zhao, Jichang; Pröllochs, Nicolas et al.
2025In Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media, 19, p. 403-429
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Abstract :
[en] Political elites play an important role in the proliferation of online misinformation. However, an understanding of how fact-checking platforms pick up politicized misinformation for fact-checking is still in its infancy. Here, we conduct an empirical analysis of mentions of U.S. political elites within fact-checked statements. For this purpose, we collect a comprehensive dataset consisting of 35,014 true and false statements that have been fact-checked by two major fact-checking organizations (Snopes, PolitiFact) in the U.S. between 2008 and 2023, i.e., within an observation period of 15 years. Subsequently, we perform content analysis and explanatory regression modeling to analyze how veracity is linked to mentions of U.S. political elites in fact-checked statements. Our analysis yields the following main findings: (i) Fact-checked false statements are, on average, 20% more likely to mention political elites than true fact-checked statements. (ii) There is a partisan asymmetry such that fact-checked false statements are 88.1% more likely to mention Democrats, but 26.5% less likely to mention Republicans, compared to fact-checked true statements. (iii) Mentions of political elites in fact-checked false statements reach the highest level during the months preceding elections. (iv) Fact-checked false statements that mention political elites carry stronger other-condemning emotions and are more likely to be pro-Republican, compared to fact-checked true statements. In sum, our study offers new insights into understanding mentions of political elites in false statements on U.S. fact-checking platforms, and bridges important findings at the intersection between misinformation and politicization.
Research center :
Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SnT) > IRiSC - Socio-Technical Cybersecurity
Disciplines :
Computer science
Author, co-author :
CHUAI, Yuwei ;  University of Luxembourg > Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SNT) > IRiSC
Zhao, Jichang
Pröllochs, Nicolas
LENZINI, Gabriele  ;  University of Luxembourg > Interdisciplinary Centre for Security, Reliability and Trust (SNT) > IRiSC
External co-authors :
yes
Language :
English
Title :
Is Fact-Checking Politically Neutral? Asymmetries in How U.S. Fact-Checking Organizations Pick Up False Statements Mentioning Political Elites
Publication date :
07 June 2025
Journal title :
Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media
ISSN :
2334-0770
eISSN :
2162-3449
Publisher :
Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI)
Volume :
19
Pages :
403-429
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Available on ORBilu :
since 29 December 2025

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