Houston Chronicle

GOP groups say Google’s ad changes will hurt turnout

- By Kevin Freking

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign and other Republican election groups criticized tech giant Google on Tuesday for making it harder for political advertiser­s to target specific types of people.

The GOP groups said the changes will lead directly to suppressin­g voter turnout and would “disproport­ionately” hurt Republican candidates.

Google has said that, beginning in January in the United States, advertiser­s will only be able to target political ads based on broad categories such as sex, age and postal code. Currently, ads can be tailored to more specific groups, such as political affiliatio­n.

But the Trump campaign and Republican groups said Trump has built the greatest digital operation in politics, so Google’s decision will “disproport­ionately impact both the Trump operation and all of the Republican candidates and organizati­ons that derive strength from it.”

“Google should immediatel­y reverse its decision in order to ensure they do not suppress voter turnout during both the Democrat primaries and the 2020 general election,” the GOP groups said.

Democratic political groups have also been critical of Google’s new policy. “Tech companies should not reduce the power of the grassroots just because it is easier than addressing abuse on their platforms,” said leaders of the Democratic National Committee and allied groups helping oversee Democratic congressio­nal campaigns.

Social media companies are grappling with how best to prevent a repeat of 2016 when Russian operatives, masqueradi­ng as Americans, used targeted advertisem­ents and falsified news articles to interact with and attempt to deceive tens of millions of social media users in the United States.

Google’s announceme­nt follows the decision by Twitter to ban political ads. Twitter also placed restrictio­ns on ads related to social causes such as climate change or abortion rights. Twitter said the move would help reduce the flow of election-related misinforma­tion. The Trump campaign protested that change as well but said

Google’s will have more impact.

“Much has been made of Twitter’s equally concerning decision to ban political ads and suppress speech, but because advertisin­g on that platform is ineffectiv­e and only a tiny percentage of Americans use Twitter, their impact is insignific­ant,” the Trump campaign and GOP groups said in a joint release. “Google, however, is a serious platform with very deep reach across the entire country.”

Trump has been complainin­g of bias from social media companies, though he is a voracious user of their services.

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