The Phnom Penh Post

Marcos Jr wins social media misinfo race

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PHILIPPINE social media has exploded with support for presidenti­al election favourite Ferdinand Marcos Junior, driven by a massive misinforma­tion campaign aimed at revamping the family brand and smearing his top rival.

False and misleading claims have flooded Facebook, YouTube, TikTok and Twitter in the lead-up to the May 9 polls, pounding Filipinos with a relentless barrage of propaganda on platforms where they rank among the heaviest users in the world.

Voter surveys show the son and namesake of the country’s former dictator heading towards a landslide victory – the endgame of a decadeslon­g, well-funded effort to return the family to the presidenti­al palace they fled in disgrace in 1986.

Critics and opponents accuse Marcos Jr and his supporters of trying to portray his father’s two-decade rule as a golden age of peace and prosperity while whitewashi­ng human rights abuses and the plundering of state coffers.

But the effort to make over the family’s image appears to be translatin­g into votes among the largely young electorate and those nostalgic for the Marcos years.

Al Contrata, 25, was born a decade after a military-backed popular uprising toppled the dictator from power and chased the family into exile in the United States.

Facebook posts about the elder Marcos have persuaded him to vote for his son.

“I learned about the infrastruc­ture that was built during the time of president Marcos. Since then, I saw him in a positive light,” said Contrata, a delivery driver near Manila, who voted for President Rodrigo Duterte in 2016.

“I think maybe Bongbong Marcos can continue what his father started,” referring to the candidate by his nickname.

‘Troll armies’

Election-related misinforma­tion has focused primarily on the two presidenti­al frontrunne­rs, Marcos Jr and incumbent Vice President Leni Robredo, analysis by AFP’s Fact Check team and local fact-checking alliance Tsek.ph shows.

“Data show Robredo reeling from prepondera­ntly negative messages and Marcos Jr enjoying overwhelmi­ng positive ones,” said Maria Diosa Labiste and Yvonne Chua of Tsek.ph.

They said the trend was reminiscen­t of the flood of posts about Duterte

and his opponents in 2016 that were seen as key to his win.

Marcos Jr draws support from the family’s northern stronghold as well as his alliance with vice presidenti­al candidate and first daughter Sara Duterte. But social media’s influence is critical. One major battlegrou­nd is Facebook, the most popular platform in the Philippine­s and used by most of its 76 million internet users.

Since Marcos Jr’s narrow loss to Robredo in the 2016 vice presidenti­al race, pro-Marcos pages have pumped out misinforma­tion about everything from electoral fraud and the family’s wealth to economic achievemen­ts

during his father’s rule.

Robredo, who trailed Marcos by 45 percentage points in the latest poll by Pulse Asia Research, has also been a major target.

Among the dozens of claims about the Marcoses debunked by AFP is the popular assertion that the patriarch made his fortune when he was a lawyer via a massive gold payment from a client.

AFP also fact-checked dozens of false or misleading claims about Robredo, including doctored photos and videos that aim to portray her as stupid, unfriendly towards voters or even a communist.

Activity has only intensifie­d ahead of the 2022 elections, drowning out support for Robredo.

In the past year, there have been nearly 75 million interactio­ns – reactions, comments or shares – with posts on more than a hundred pro-Marcos pages with at least 3,000 followers, according to data from social media monitoring platform CrowdTangl­e.

That compares with just over 39 million interactio­ns for the same number of pages promoting Robredo.

When Robredo announced her presidenti­al bid on October 7, interactio­ns on pro-Marcos pages spiked to more than 1.8 million – about nine times the daily average.

Pro-Robredo pages received 487,000 interactio­ns.

“It’s hard for the other campaigns to compete with the Marcos machinery online, because this is six years in the making,” said Cleve Arguelles, an assistant lecturer in political science at De La Salle University in Manila.

“They’ve really worked hard to dominate these spaces and they’re reaping the benefits of investing early in troll armies and building these online communitie­s.”

It is not possible to tell how many of the pages were created by real supporters or the candidates.

In January, Twitter suspended more than 300 accounts reportedly linked to supporters of Marcos Jr, which the social media giant said had violated its rules on manipulati­on and spam. Marcos Jr has denied using trolls. In an interview with the One PH channel broadcast on Monday, he accused fact-checkers of sometimes having “their own agenda” and inventing quotes that they attributed to him.

“For me, I am the victim of fake news, because there are many things that were said about me that are not true,” Marcos Jr said.

‘Long-term investment’

Marcos Jr’s social media strength is the result of a “long-term investment” to rehabilita­te the family brand, said Jonathan Corpus Ong, a disinforma­tion researcher at the University of Massachuse­tts and Harvard University.

After the fallen dictator’s death in 1989, his heirs returned home and began their remarkable political comeback, getting elected to public office while distancing themselves from their past.

The Marcoses have previously denied local media reports that they asked the now-defunct British political consultanc­y Cambridge Analytica – at the centre of a Facebook data scandal in the past decade – to “rebrand” the family.

Members of the clan are often portrayed as victims in misleading posts claiming they receive unfair treatment from mainstream media – echoing claims by former US president Donald Trump.

Those messages resonated with Nelson Sy, 59, who manages two pro-Marcos groups on Facebook.

Sy, who sells imported cosmetics and perfumes in Manila, admitted becoming an “even more avid supporter” of Marcos Jr after seeing posts that “attacked” him.

“You know what they say, ‘the more they attack, the more we multiply’,” said Sy, who rejects fraud accusation­s against the Marcoses.

To combat misinforma­tion, Facebook said it was working with the Commission on Elections to “connect people with accurate election informatio­n” as well as supporting fact-checking activities and investing in education programmes.

But Maria Ressa, a Nobel Peace Prize-winning journalist and cofounder of local news site Rappler, said the platform could do more to “help bring down the lies”.

“You cannot have integrity of elections if you don’t have integrity of facts,” she said.

“If they make the facts debatable, they are essentiall­y . . . dooming our nation.”

 ?? AFP ?? Philippine social media has exploded with support for presidenti­al election favourite Ferdinand Marcos Junior (centre), driven by a massive misinforma­tion campaign aimed at revamping the family brand and smearing his top rival.
AFP Philippine social media has exploded with support for presidenti­al election favourite Ferdinand Marcos Junior (centre), driven by a massive misinforma­tion campaign aimed at revamping the family brand and smearing his top rival.
 ?? AFP ?? Al Contrata, 25, a supporter of presidenti­al candidate Bongbong Marcos, son of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, holds his phone during an interview with AFP at his residence in Manila on March 10.
AFP Al Contrata, 25, a supporter of presidenti­al candidate Bongbong Marcos, son of the late dictator Ferdinand Marcos, holds his phone during an interview with AFP at his residence in Manila on March 10.

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