Research/Study
On Facebook, right-leaning pages lead the conversation about violence in Israel and Gaza
Right-leaning pages earned roughly 56% of interactions despite sharing only 37% of the total posts
Published
Content warning: This article contains numerous examples of bigoted rhetoric.
According to a new Media Matters study, right-leaning Facebook pages led the conversation about violence in Israel and Gaza from October 7 through November 26, earning the most total interactions on related posts compared to other news and politics pages, despite ideologically nonaligned pages posting the most.
Our key findings include:
- Facebook pages that regularly discuss news and politics posted over 115,000 times about the violence in Israel and Gaza during the time frame studied, earning more than 53 million total interactions on these posts.
- Right-leaning pages accounted for about 37% of these posts, or over 42,000, but earned roughly 56% of total interactions, or nearly 30 million.
- Right-leaning pages were also responsible for half of the 10 posts that earned the most total interactions.
- Right-wing outlets — including The Daily Wire, Blaze Media, and the Western Journal — promoted their articles and videos on Facebook across their networks of pages, with The Daily Wire, for example, posting over 5,000 times across 11 pages, earning at least 5.9 million total interactions on its posts.
- Posts from these networks of right-leaning pages fearmongered about immigrants and refugees, condemned President Joe Biden for sending humanitarian aid to Gaza, and dismissed concerns about rising Islamophobia.
Media Matters also identified posts in right-wing Facebook groups that featured hateful and violent rhetoric aimed at Muslim and Palestinian people, antisemitic rhetoric, and fearmongering about the “end times” and “World War III.”
Since Hamas’ attack on Israel on October 7, at least 1,200 Israelis and 14,000 Palestinians in Gaza have reportedly been killed. This includes 57 “journalists and media workers,” of whom 50 were Palestinian, four were Israeli, and three were Lebanese.