Are Chinese Netizens More Hawkish Than Their Government?
Spoiler alert: Yes—at least when it comes to conflicts with the Philippines in the South China Sea. Chinese social media is clearly more hawkish towards the Philippines than China’s (largely state-sponsored) news media, according to recent findings from Talisman, FilterLabs’ data platform. Our data reinforce recent survey-based research by Johns Hopkins professor Dr. Jessica Chen Weiss. Over the past two years, tensions between China and the Philippines have frequently run high. This spring alone there were several major issues: Chinese and Filipino ships raised competing flags in a show of force (point 8 in the graph above); Google Maps changed “South China Sea” to the “West Philippines Sea” after successful lobbying by the government of the Philippines, to the dismay of Beijing (6); and the Filipino government lifted a long-standing ban on officials traveling to Taiwan (7). To name but a few. As we tracked online discourse, using Talisman, we noticed that social media consistently registered more negative average sentiment around the Philippines than Chinese news. We found several themes that help explain the news outlet / social media divide:
An unexpected clue in the data? One thing we noticed in the chart above was that positive sentiment trends in the state-affiliated press tended to precede upturns in social media sentiment—such as in mid-October 2024 and late March 2025. The exact reason was not immediately clear, but it is possible (perhaps even likely) that the state coverage of the Philippines does influence how Chinese netizens feel about their neighbor to the southeast. For now, it seems as though the Chinese Communist Party is including positive outlooks towards the Philippines in its news coverage, even during confrontational moments. This could be impacting social media sentiment in the short term, but in the longer term it seems that Chinese netizens, for whatever reason, latch onto more hawkish narratives. GRAPH LEGEND Explore the Data in TalismanHave questions of your own? Want more hyper-local insights into hard-to-reach places (like Russia) around the world? Check out the live data on analytics platform, Talisman! All subscribers can check out the live version of the chart above; those with full-access subscriptions can also investigate the individual artifacts underlying it, and so much more. You can also view data for past newsletters, including updated data for last week's story on the Kashmir crisis. If you don’t have a Talisman account yet, sign up now—a basic subscription is free! |