The Mercury News Weekend

Infighting, online hoaxes mar Democrats’ campaigns

- By David Klepper and Amanda Seitz

RINDGE, N. H. » A group of Los Angeles artists were awaiting the results of the Democratic Party’s Iowa caucuses, hoping Bernie Sanders would win, when they fired off a hashtag on Twitter poking fun at Pete Buttigieg.

By the next morning, the hashtag — #MayorCheat — was trending worldwide.

“That’s so funny that we’re the first people to make this joke,” said Nick Thorburn, a 38- year- old musician.

Not everyone was laughing.

Some on social media capitalize­d on the trending hashtag to spread misinforma­tion or conspiracy theories about Buttigieg, including claims that he had colluded with the Democratic Party to rig the caucuses. Other accounts accused Russian trolls of promoting the hashtag to divide Democrats.

Yet it wasn’t the work of Russian trolls, or even Republican pranksters.

The inaccurate insults were traded online among fellow Democrats. And it’s the type of left-wing misinforma­tion that, combined with a prolonged primary contest, has some worried about the party’s ability to unite ahead of November.

“I hope people, if their candidate doesn’t get the nomination, can still support whoever does,” said Gary Klar, a retired school teacher from Hancock, N. H., who supports Joe Biden but said he will vote for whoever wins the party’s nomination. “We don’t want sour grapes.”

As the tight race moves on to Nevada and South Carolina, the online misinforma­tion has not died down. Unsupporte­d claims making the rounds in recent days include assertions that one Democratic candidate has a history of heart attacks and that another killed dogs as a child.

Propagatin­g an online smear against a rival requires only coining a snappy hashtag, creating a satirical meme or simply stating the threads of a conspiracy theory. Those tactics are the new normal in political campaignin­g, explained Susan Etlinger, an industry analyst for Altimeter, which researches and advises on disruptive technologi­es.

“Anybody with an agenda, a little bit of a budget and some time can figure out a way to troll, to create a bot or to use cheap fakes,” said Etlinger, referring to automated accounts and manipulate­d images. “We’re entering this phase now that we have to take for a given that for any election ... there’s a potential for a lot of misinforma­tion.”

The Democratic infighting echoes 2016, when supporters of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders accused the Democratic Party of favoring the eventual nominee, Hillary Clinton. Many Sanders supporters were suspicious of party insiders and news outlets that they believed unfairly boosted Clinton, said Pat Cote, a Sanders supporter.

Cote said he now tweets several times a day about Sanders, his rivals or the election.

Earlier this week, he tweeted to his 33,300 followers that the upcoming Nevada caucus is “going to be a disaster and nothing is being done to stop it. The only explanatio­n is that this is done by design.”

Cote said social media has emerged as a key way for Sanders supporters to organize and push back against what they see as an unfriendly establishm­ent.

In the days that followed the Iowa caucuses, as the results remained in limbo, some progressiv­e Twitter users claimed Buttigieg’s campaign had developed the failed app that was used to count the votes in Iowa. (It didn’t.) Others began posting images of rats that mentioned Buttigieg.

Since then, the online tenor of the race has become a campaign talking point.

During Wednesday’s Democratic debate in Nevada, Sen. Elizabeth Warren was asked whether such attacks from Sanders’ supporters might make it difficult to unite the party. Warren last month found herself on the receiving end of online attacks when accounts claiming to support Sanders flooded Twitter with the snake emojis and the terms #NeverWarre­n and # WarrenIsAS­nake, after she claimed that Sanders had told her privately in 2018 that a woman could not win the presidency.

Sanders argued back that his own backers have been targeted with “vicious, racist, sexist attacks” and that most of his supporters don’t send hateful messages online.

Mike Bloomberg’s campaign also released a campaign video Monday on Twitter criticizin­g “Bernie Bros.,” the nickname given to some of Sanders’ most vocal online supporters.

The nicknames and taunts that Sanders’ supporters hurl at rival campaigns is a familiar strategy, and one that Trump has successful­ly employed for years, said Rita Kirk, a political communicat­ion expert at Southern Methodist University.

“Sanders’ demographi­c is young people who are super social media savvy and (to them) it’s just fun — they want to come up with the first trending statement,” Kirk said. “But it affects an image of that person, whether you like them or not.”

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