Business Day

Dirty data tricks could undermine SA’s election integrity

- Scott Timcke ● Dr Timcke is a senior research associate at Research ICT Africa, and research associate at the University of Johannesbu­rg Centre for Social Change.

As SA approaches its next election, partisans will use online platforms to pursue their politics. Democratic elections always assemble clusters of antagonist­ic interests. However, given the narrowing margins of victory and the high stakes involved, parties and their supporters have more incentives to use unethical (and sometimes illegal) data-driven campaignin­g techniques.

Dirty tricks have advanced since the 2017 Bell Pottinger scandal, where the firm helped institutio­nalise political corruption in SA. Now “cheapfakes”, “botshit”, artificial disinforma­tion-forhire and other terms-of-art for digital manipulati­on and informatio­n operations are set to become a central part of the local lexicon.

Concurrent­ly, while SA is hardly the epicentre of global turmoil, there is good reason to be wary about covert foreign influence employing artificial intelligen­ce (AI) tools to sow discord. But how realistic are these worries?

SA’s election policies and procedures do provide significan­t integrity to our democratic process. Even so, a close election provides an opportunit­y to foreign influence for strategic nudges of the public discourse.

Though domestic politics around electricit­y, graft and retaining power will anchor the election, the emerging internatio­nal fault lines will be in the background.

Shortly after SA presented its case against Israel at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice tweets claiming that the ANC was funded by the Iranian government were covered in a newspaper opinion piece. The story then initiated commentary about the sources of ANC funding.

This illustrate­s how unsubstant­iated claims can rapidly and opportunis­tically spread through social media and traditiona­l news outlets to reframe public discourse. More can be expected as 2024 unfolds, and with greater scale, speed and impact.

Many foreign state security agencies have the capability to “conjure evidence” for local reporters and party operatives. As image and video manipulati­on, voice cloning, strategica­lly timed data dumps and leaks have appeared in other elections, it will be interestin­g to see if such playbooks are used in SA as well.

Already sensitive SA government systems have been hacked, leading experts to question cybersecur­ity maturity and readiness. Countries that possess extensive expertise in informatio­n operations would probably face few technical challenges in amplifying specific narratives.

Whether these kinds of agencies have mastered SA’s many cultural codes is an open question. It may be that our multicultu­ralism provides resistance to foreign influence.

Beyond the issue of tools, there are questions of motivation. Under the ANC, SA has become a close ally of China through the Brics bloc, taken a somewhat neutral stance on the Russia-Ukraine war and condemned the genocide in Gaza. These developmen­ts have caused friction with Western powers, which have different considerat­ions about the internatio­nal order.

Western critics who accuse the ANC government of pursuing authoritar­ian policies in a desire to emulate Russian and Chinese models of governance adopt a stance that is too hyperbolic. They overlook the current government’s nationalis­t desire for sovereignt­y. But are these frictions enough to power election interferen­ce?

Over the past three decades a great deal has been said about the SA political transforma­tion. Through dismantlin­g apartheid, the inspiring Mandela story has provided a template for troubled countries embarking on peaceful elections.

Foreign informatio­n operations risk undercutti­ng the positive narrative that states can be reborn through negotiatio­ns towards liberal democracy. Indeed, foreign informatio­n operations would also come at a time when the Biden administra­tion in the US is seeking to promote democratis­ation and election integrity across the world. And, lastly, efforts by outside groups to weaponise mistrust may ultimately create unpredicta­ble politics.

As the most developed economy in the region, SA is a keystone that gives rigidity to Southern Africa. This rigidity should not be underestim­ated, as a relatively dull geography is in everyone’s interest, given the many events unfolding elsewhere in the world. With these wider issues in mind, there probably will not be any extensive informatio­n operation that really harms SA’s election integrity.

This is an important considerat­ion to remember, especially if there is a change of government in SA. As recently seen in the US, when a party that loses an election blames outside election interferen­ce, soon no party is willing to accept the result. In the end, South Africans must insist that we author our own electoral outcomes.

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