The Philippine Star

Facebook to drop on-site support for political campaign

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SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Facebook Inc. said on Thursday that it would no longer dispatch employees to the offices of political campaigns to offer support ahead of elections, as it did with US President Donald Trump in the 2016 race.

The company and other major online ad sellers including Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Twitter Inc. have long offered free dedicated assistance to strengthen relationsh­ips with top advertiser­s such as presidenti­al campaigns.

Brad Parscale, who was Trump’s online ads chief in 2016, last year called onsite “embeds” from Facebook crucial to the candidate’s victory. Facebook has said that Democratic challenger Hillary Clinton was offered identical help, but she accepted a different level than Trump.

Google and Twitter did not immediatel­y respond to requests to comment on whether they also would pull back support.

Facebook said it could offer assistance to more candidates globally by focusing on offering support through an online portal instead of in person. It said that political organizati­ons still would be able to contact employees to receive basic training on using Facebook or for assistance on getting ads approved.

Bloomberg first reported the new approach.

Facebook, Twitter, and Google served as “quasi-digital consultant­s” to US election campaigns in 2016, researcher­s from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and University of Utah found in a paper published a year ago.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Silhouette­s of mobile users are seen next to a screen projection of Facebook logo.
REUTERS Silhouette­s of mobile users are seen next to a screen projection of Facebook logo.

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