"How Social Media Changed the Political Landscape" (https://books2read.com/u/4D7Y8A) is a book you probably won’t read, and that's exactly what it addresses. It's about how our political environment now runs through algorithms, not town halls, and why even the most curious minds tend to scroll past the very explanations they need. Ironically, this book does reveal out why books like this one get ignored in the first place.
That said, you should give it a look. This is the most complete exploration out there of how politics has been reshaped by the digital agora, an endless, chaotic forum where populism thrives, extremes echo louder than reason, and conservatives accidentally found the upper hand while progressives split into smaller and smaller pieces. The book digs into how the left still misunderstands voter behavior, why that keeps costing them elections, and how both sides are stuck in patterns they don't know how to break.
It covers how old ideas about how people vote don't hold up anymore, and why relying on those outdated models keeps political movements flailing. It also makes the case for why the left and right both need to take the digital terrain seriously, stop recycling strategies from a bygone media age, and start building genuine grassroots power that fits this new world. It even looks at how being "the establishment" used to be a good thing, and why it now feels like a political liability.
If you've ever wondered why politics feels broken and fast and personal and more disconnected from reality than ever, this book might help you stop wondering.