Paper 1 · P1.4.2 · Element 1 of 8
The media - core
What the topic is, in two sentences
The media spec sub-section is one of the shortest in P1 but tests heavily. The spec asks you to assess the role and impact of media on politics, both during and between general elections, including opinion polls, media bias and persuasion. The 2024 election saw the most digital-driven UK campaign in history, but the legacy press still set agendas through which the digital story flowed.
Spec sub-sections (Paper 1, P1.4.2)
- P1.4.2 The assessment of the role and impact of the media on politics, both during and between key general elections, including the importance and relevance of opinion polls, media bias and persuasion.
The three most-asked exam questions on this topic
Question type 1
Evaluate the view that the media has more influence on UK politics than political parties.
2022 Q2(a). The classic media-vs-parties framing.
Question type 2
Evaluate the view that opinion polls undermine democracy in the UK.
Predicted Q2(a) — opinion-polls-specific. Tests the dual role: polls as information vs polls as manipulation.
Question type 3
Evaluate the view that social media has replaced traditional media as the dominant political influence.
Current-affairs framing. Tested 2023M. 2024 election as the live case.
The default line of argument
LoA: Traditional media still set the agenda; social media amplifies and distorts it. The 2024 election showed this — legacy press shaped the story arc (Conservative chaos, Labour return) while social media ran parallel campaigns (Reform UK on TikTok, Greens on Instagram). The either-or split in the question misses how the two now work together.
How to use it: Pick this LoA for any media-influence question. Sharpen to a polling-specific line if the question targets opinion polls.
The 7 things you need to be able to name in your sleep
- The press / broadcast / online split — press (Sun, Daily Mail, Telegraph — partisan, declining audience); broadcast (BBC, ITV, Sky — regulated impartiality); online (Twitter/X, TikTok, YouTube — unregulated, algorithm-driven).
- Opinion polling failures — 1992 (Conservative win polls missed); 2015 (Conservative majority polls missed); 2017 (June election Conservative-Labour gap underestimated). Most polling now uses MRP to make results more reliable.
- MRP (Multilevel Regression with Post-stratification) — modern polling method — combines small constituency samples with demographic modelling. YouGov's 2017 MRP famously predicted hung parliament accurately.
- 2024 election examples — Reform UK's TikTok strategy; Labour disciplined to legacy media; Conservative campaign collapse under digital scrutiny; YouGov MRP within 2 seats of final result.
- Two key thinkers / theorists — Maxwell McCombs + Donald Shaw (agenda setting 1972 — 'media doesn't tell us what to think, but what to think ABOUT'); Stanley Cohen (moral panic, 1972).
- Media regulation gap — BBC Charter + Ofcom regulate broadcast; press self-regulated through IPSO (mostly Mail Group + Sun); online regulation thin — Online Safety Act 2023 not yet biting on political content.
- Opinion-polls-as-influence cases — BBC ban on polling 1-week pre-election rejected; 'shy Tory' effect disputed; bandwagon (herd) effect seen in 2017.