USA TODAY US Edition

Politician­s: New Facebook rule has ruined campaigns

- Jessica Guynn

SAN FRANCISCO – New rules requiring political campaigns to verify their identities before getting authorizat­ion to buy ads on Facebook are preventing some candidates from getting their message out in the critical last days before June primary elections. And one congressio­nal candidate says it may tip the election to his opponent.

“The irony of the situation is that Facebook created this feature to mitigate meddling in elections, but that’s exactly what this has turned into,” said E. Brian Rose, who’s challengin­g incumbent Rep. Steven Palazzo in Mississipp­i’s 4th Congressio­nal District’s Republican primary. “It has sabotaged me and other politician­s who have elections coming up in the next week or two.”

Facebook has adopted new requiremen­ts ahead of the midterms in November to block the type of interferen­ce by Russian operatives that rocked the 2016

presidenti­al election.

Scrutiny of Facebook intensifie­d after a Russian propaganda operation was charged with orchestrat­ing a Facebook advertisin­g campaign to meddle in the 2016 presidenti­al election. The roughly 3,500 Facebook ads that were created by the Russian-based Internet Research Agency are at the center of Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s February indictment of 13 Russians and three companies seeking to influence the election.

The social media giant says it began alerting political advertiser­s to the new process in April. In May, Facebook sent emails to Facebook page administra­tors reminding them of the upcoming changes.

But two candidates running in Mississipp­i primary elections on June 5 say they only found out on Thursday afternoon when Facebook started rejecting their ads.

Richard Boyanton, who is challengin­g veteran Sen. Roger Wicker in the Republican primary, says Facebook was a handy tool for a smaller campaign in a competitiv­e statewide race, allowing him to cheaply and easily target voters in remote places. Then Facebook informed him Thursday that he could not buy any more ads until he verified his identity.

“This is really throwing us over the bridge all of a sudden” in the midst of an election, Boyanton said. “Why couldn’t they find a window of opportunit­y in the country when we didn’t have an election going on?”

Facebook declined to comment.

For Rose, too, Facebook has been a critical part of his grass-roots political strategy since November 2016, allowing him to build a following and narrowly target voters.

“They ... sold us on the positives of using Facebook (but) cut our legs off,” Rose said.

On Thursday, Rose says he completed the process to receive an authorizat­ion code from Facebook in the mail.

“The message stated the mail would arrive in 12 to 14 days,” he said. “This is disastrous, because the election is 12 days from today.”

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