Now it’s time for some conclusions.

In order to do so, we will briefly expose some of our findings on:

EU media outlets

EU politicians

Differences in the communities’ composition

We already explained our methodology in the previous posts.

In case you missed it, this time you will find it at the end of the article.

EU Media outlets

In the table below we compare the number of MEPs following some of the most popular EU media outlets. Data are the ones we analyzed at the beginning of October, and remember that nothing (especially on Twitter) is set in stone. These media outlets are quite different one to each other, but they all represent specialized news sources on what’s happening at the EU level.

EurActiv (@EurActiv) is the most popular one with 296 MEPs following it and it also ranks 6th in a more general classification where most followed account is @JunckerEU with 401 followers.

You will not find the European Voice (@EuropeanVoiceEV) in the table, since it doesn’t exist anymore, but it still has 221 followers among MEPs (@POLITICOEurope, its successor, has 224).

Among EU journalist, the first one is Peter Spiegel (@SpiegelPeter) with 171 MEPs following him, with newsletter-man @PoliticoRyan in second place (164). No other journalist has more than 100 MEPs among his/her followers.

Analyzing the geographic distribution: the map shows the most central EU-media-account in each community.

The match here is between EurActiv (France and Germany) and POLITICO Europe (Netherlands and Austria), but it’s also interesting to see how Spanish, Italian and Danish MEPs are relying on local EU-specialized media.

British MEPs, instead, prefer reading the Parliament Magazine (@parlimag). Are they going to miss the MEP Awards after the Brexit? :)

EU Politicians

Who are the most central EU politicians inside the different country-based-communities? Of course we are excluding MEPs here (so no Martin Schulz in the map).

Well, the President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker almost takes it all, but the British and Dutch MEPs prefer Donald Tusk in his institutional version.

Mr. Tusk is also a prophet in his own home Poland, with his bilingual account @donaldtusk.

Interesting to note, Denmark and Sweden are instead more interested in following what their own Commissioners Margrethe Vestager and Cecilia Malmström have to say.

Differences in the communities’ composition

Analyzing the top 30 central accounts in the different communities, we’ve already seen how some of these groups are focused on media outlets, some on journalists, some others are full of national politicians, while others are not. Here is a summary.

Note: the sum for each communty is not 30 because we are excluding think tanks, EU politicians, EU official accounts etc. from this visualization.

Isn’t SNA (social network analysis) overused?

We are using Twitter as one of the sources to discover informal networks and as a tool to analyze how politicians represent themselves publicly. In cases like those ones we think Twitter overcomes Facebook, since it is the media preferred by politicians, media and journalists.

Our idea is to give useful information to people working with politics, in institutional relations and communications, so if you wish to have a deeper analysis don’t hesitate to contact us.

Social Network analyses have also proven to be still very popular. When we started this research, we thought that since they are now a bit overused, no one would care about this one. But still, it looks like you people can’t get enough of analyzed social network data :)

We are then a bit surprised by the success of this MEPs’ connections series (huge thanks to everyone who helped us spreading the word around).

Please remember, social network data are interesting and immediate to understand, but they are not the only interesting data you can work on when analyzing how politicians behave (or, even more, how people is going to vote).

Let us help you discover more interesting information, working together in analyzing less mainstream data :)