National Post

Big Tech cashes in with election spots

Record profits not likely to placate critics

- Kurt Wagner, Mark Bergen and Sarah Frier

The campaigns for President Donald Trump and Joe Biden spent a combined US$ 192.3 million on Facebook advertisin­g in the first 10 months of 2020, with over a quarter of that coming in October alone, according to data from Facebook Inc.

The presidenti­al campaigns for each party more than doubled their ad spending on the social network compared with the presidenti­al candidates in the 2016 race, when experts agreed that Trump outmanoeuv­red Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton online.

Biden spent slightly more on Facebook than Trump this year, at US$99.8 million compared with US$92.5 million, though the president poured more into Alphabet Inc.’ s Google, where the two campaigns have spent a combined US$ 215.5 million on ads on Google since May 2018. That spending came largely on Youtube, including a wave of Trump ads on the video site’s home page this week.

But even as candidates pour tens of millions of dollars into advertisin­g on the platforms, there is widespread discontent both about the rules the companies have set around the election and the manner in which they’ve enforced them. Case in point is a policy that Facebook announced in September to ban new political ads in the week before the election.

The ban didn’t actually keep campaigns from running ads during that period, only from introducin­g new ads that could introduce misleading messaging into the campaign’s final days. The logic of the move was lost on Gautam Hans, a professor at Vanderbilt Law School focused on the First Amendment. “If we’re worried about political ads and their effect on voting, voting is well underway,” he said, noting the wave of early voting that began before the moratorium took effect.

There have also been issues with execution. Facebook blocked thousands of ads, mostly from the Biden campaign, even though they’d been posted before the cut- off date. The campaign said the disruption, which Facebook attributed to a technical glitch, had likely cost them over US$ 500,000 in donations. The company said it has not been able to resolve issues with some of the ads, and is unlikely to be able to do so during the restricted period.

Rob Flaherty, Biden’s digital director, said the incident made it “abundantly clear that Facebook was wholly unprepared to handle this election despite having four years to prepare.”

The Trump campaign, for its part, attempted an endrun around the policy by doing a limited run of new ads the day before the ban went into effect. These ads included language like, “Vote today!” and “Election day is today,” presumably with the intention of promoting them more heavily when those statements actually made sense.

Facebook blocked the ads, citing a policy that forbids paid messaging that misleads people about the electoral process. But it allowed other ads claiming record economic growth in the U. S. days before the statistics were actually published. Samantha Zager, a spokeswoma­n for Trump’s campaign, accused Facebook of making rules and selectivel­y enforcing them because the company was “working against President Trump.”

Daniel Kreiss, an associate professor at the University of North Carolina who tracks political communicat­ion, said the platforms have failed to create predictabl­e guardrails for political actors. “We still see way too much uneven enforcemen­t policies, and way too much changing of those policies months or weeks out from a presidenti­al election,” he said, adding that Facebook’s performanc­e has been particular­ly bad. “It never ceases to amaze me that a company with so many billions in market cap can’t figure this out.”

Facebook, Google, and Twitter Inc. all found themselves at the centre of a political firestorm for their handling of the 2016 election. The following year, federal lawmakers made a high- profile push to create new rules for online political advertisin­g, but it failed, leaving platforms to develop safeguards on their own. All three companies created databases where people could track political spending, and began developing other policies.

Last October, Twitter announced it would ban political ads altogether. Facebook and Google also considered bans, at least for the final days or weeks before an election. Sridhar Ramaswamy, a Google executive who ran its advertisin­g operations until 2018, said he advocated internally for dropping political ads altogether. Google also considered a pre- election moratorium on political ads on Youtube’s home page, some of the most expensive real estate on the internet. Instead, it sold the space to the Trump campaign, Bloomberg reported in February.

 ?? Dado Ruvic / Illustrati­on/ Reuters ?? President Donald Trump and challenger Joe Biden have spent nearly US$200 million on Facebook ads in 2020.
Dado Ruvic / Illustrati­on/ Reuters President Donald Trump and challenger Joe Biden have spent nearly US$200 million on Facebook ads in 2020.

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