1.Scale
Over just one week, the UK local elections generated:
Analysis: This positions social media as a primary visibility channel for elections, not a secondary commentary layer. In practical terms, narratives form very quickly, scale fast, and are shaped hugely by the number of people participating in content (sharing, watching, liking and commenting). However…
2. Sentiment
Data shows 39.2% of conversations are negative, signalling a discourse that is notably critical in tone. This negativity is driven by several overlapping factors:
Analysis: Rather than policy‑led debate, social conversation is driven more by emotion. Negative content is more likely to be shared, so it travels faster and further than neutral or constructive posts. This helps explain why moments of high visibility are often also the most negative. Online conversation also centres on individual leaders rather than detailed policy. This personalises criticism and accountability, making narratives easier to follow and quicker to escalate.
What this tells us about social media’s role?
Social media doesn’t just show what people think during elections, it plays a big role in shaping the conversation. Emotional content spreads faster, which means attention and tone rise together. When targeting policy makers or key political stakeholders we should take into account the following:
Main data source: https://www.visibrain.com/blog/uk-local-elections-2026