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. 2021 Jun 24;11:13207. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-92337-2

Table 1.

Hashtag persistence for each discursive community across the entire temporal period covered by our data set (51 days in total).

Ht M5S CDX CSX
100% dimaio, lega, renzi, berlusconi, m5s, pd, italia salvini, m5s, centrodestra, pd, lega renzi, salvini, dimaio, m5s, pd
98% forzaitalia, salvini berlusconi, italia, renzi
96% roma, ottoemezzo forzaitalia berlusconi, italia, lega
94% centrodestra, ricercapubblica russia
92% boschi, politica dimaio europa, politica, roma
90% fi, governo fi, governo
88% casapound roma
86% meloni
84% fakenews, lavoro, liberieuguali casapound, politica forzaitalia, lavoro, usa
82% 8800precari, gentiloni, migranti, senato, voto governo, lombardia centrodestra, leu, liberieuguali
80% bonino, campagnaelettorale, casini, leu, rosatellum cdx, flattax, sinistra milano, partitodemocratico, ue
78% avanti, iovotom5s, movimento5stelle, precari, sinistra lavoro, ue campagnaelettorale, fakenews, governo

The first column shows the percentage of days each hashtag is present in the set of tweets of each community. Notice that the hashtags that are always present are those carrying the name of political parties and political leaders, while other relevant themes for the political debate are absent from (at least) some of the discursive communities. These findings suggest that the online political debate is largely focused on single personalities/political entities (as particularly evident upon inspecting the CSX hashtags) and only to a much smaller extent on themes of public interest.