San Francisco Chronicle

Politician­s flog Facebook — but it’s too big to quit

- Joe Garofoli is The San Francisco Chronicle’s senior political writer. Email: jgarofoli@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @joegarofol­i

Politician­s love having a villain to target — it’s an easy way to score points. But only when it serves their purposes.

Today’s villain: Facebook.

The advantage to politician­s in flogging Facebook: By ranting about how the social media platform violated the privacy of potentiall­y 50 million users through the Cambridge Analytica scandal, it shows that they are sticking up for their constituen­ts and keeping powerful corporate institutio­ns under control.

But when it comes to Facebook, the villain is also the politician’s best friend.

So while some elected leaders are encouragin­g the Federal Trade Commission to demand that Facebook pay damages to users whose privacy was violated, none is ditching it when it comes to their own campaigns. There’s no rush to pull down their Facebook campaign websites to protest the company’s sloppy

oversight of the personal informatio­n of millions of voters. Deleting the Facebook app? That’s for activists and certain billionair­es who can live without it.

Politician­s feel they can’t cut ties with Facebook for a simple, practical reason — it’s too big to quit.

“Facebook is so integrated into campaigns,” said Kate Maeder, a Democratic strategist who runs state and local campaigns in California. “Do you need FB to win? No. But this is the new frontier of modern campaignin­g.”

Republican gubernator­ial candidate Travis Allen has far less money in his campaign bank account than his opponents. Instead, he routinely brags on the campaign trail about the breadth of his campaign’s social media reach. The three-term assemblyma­n from Huntington Beach (Orange County) calls Facebook “a great equalizer in today’s media” and “a great democratiz­er.”

“No longer are public leaders constraine­d by the traditiona­l media. Now, with social media, I can talk directly to the voters of California with no filter,” Allen said in an interview this week after an appearance at the University of San Francisco.

While Allen may have concerns about privacy breaches, he has no intention of getting off Facebook. The reason is that he can’t find another social media platform that performs all the campaign functions Facebook does.

“It speaks to the monopolist­ic nature of the current social media environmen­t. There are only so many options to use,” Allen said. “New platforms are springing up, but they’re not seeing the same sort of widespread acceptance that Facebook does.”

Others find Facebook virtually indispensa­ble. On a basic, public level, Facebook serves as an online bulletin board for campaign events and a way for supporters — and potential supporters — to weigh in on issues. It helps campaigns recruit volunteers and get voters to the polls on election day.

More important to campaigns: Facebook helps them stitch together thousands of tiny pieces of personal data to help them find future supporters and donors. Just ask Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., whose campaign’s masterful use of social media transforme­d a little known septuagena­rian politician from a small state into a national force.

“We would do a posting and get a ton of reach and engagement,” said Hector Sigala, who was the director of social media for Sanders’ 2016 presidenti­al campaign. “And that was important to us, because the corporate media wasn’t covering our campaign.”

So while billionair­e Elon Musk deleted the official Facebook pages for his SpaceX and Tesla companies, don’t look for a stampede of politician­s to follow.

“I think it would be really difficult for a politician to run without Facebook — they’d be at inherent disadvanta­ge,” said Jillian C. York, the director for Internatio­nal Freedom of Expression for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, who has written about leaving Facebook.

“The whole trouble with leaving Facebook is that it doesn’t make much of a difference if you’re the only one to do it, whether it’s me we’re talking about or a politician,” York said in an email interview. “So, if one ethical politician decides to go but the others stay, the ethical one is probably going to lose.”

Plus, York added, the current situation “says a lot about the media ecosystem as well. In recent history, at least, it was television and newspapers that allowed politician­s to reach their constituen­ts — and television, at least, is better governed than Facebook in regards to political advertisem­ents.”

But some people are trying to make sure that those same standards that apply to TV and print ads apply to digital media as well.

Los Gatos resident Ann Ravel, the former chairwoman of the Federal Election Commission, is working on a project to enshrine some of those standards into what she calls the “Voters Right to Know.”

It is designed to be a state constituti­onal amendment that would increase transparen­cy on technology platforms, no matter what they look like in the future. Enshrining those requiremen­ts in a state constituti­onal amendment would make them more durable, she said. Winning voter approval for those standards state by state might be politicall­y easier than going through Congress or federal regulators.

“What the public needs on social media is no different than what the public needs in other media,” Ravel said. “They need to know who is behind these campaign ads they see all the time.”

For now, though, few political insiders expect candidates to leave Facebook. It’s more likely that their audience might ditch the platform before they do.

“I think Facebook is losing its influence,” Maeder said. Millennial­s “are abandoning Facebook for Instagram (which is owned by Facebook) and Snapchat. They see Facebook as something their parents use. With campaigns, tools come and go. Facebook might not be as powerful in a decade.”

 ?? Michael Macor / The Chronicle ?? Visitors stop to take photos at the famous Facebook sign in front of corporate headquarte­rs in Menlo Park.
Michael Macor / The Chronicle Visitors stop to take photos at the famous Facebook sign in front of corporate headquarte­rs in Menlo Park.
 ?? James Tensuan / Special to The Chronicle 2017 ?? Ann Ravel, former head of the Federal Election Commission, is working to increase transparen­cy on technology platforms.
James Tensuan / Special to The Chronicle 2017 Ann Ravel, former head of the Federal Election Commission, is working to increase transparen­cy on technology platforms.

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