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Fake news persists in Argentina as election draws near

As the election draws nearer, the spread of false informatio­n online shows no sign of letting up. But misinforma­tion, experts say, doesn’t just come from fake news and social networks.

- BY LUCAS ROBINSON @LUCASWROBI­NSON

With just a month and a half to go before October’s crunch presidenti­al election, fake news continues to be prevalent on social networks and in Argentine media and politics, despite the best efforts of fact-checkers and media outlets.

Yet unlike in other countries, such as Brazil and the United States, disinforma­tion plagues both sides of the political spectrum equally in Argentina. From the populist left to supporters of President Mauricio Macri, the spread of fake news persisted up

to the final hours before August’s primary vote – and it shows no sign of stopping in the run-up to next month’s general election and beyond. “Neither of the two sides found strategies or [the] opportunit­y to appeal as the side that escaped fake news,” Laura Zommer, the director of Chequeado, Argentina’s leading fact-checking website, told the Times in an interview.

In at least one way, however, both sides have sought to present a united front. In recognitio­n of the battle against false informatio­n, the Argentine government last year launched a Commission for the Verificati­on of Fake News (Comisón de Verificaci­ón de Noticias Falsas), an agency within the Camara Nacional Electoral (CNE).

Endorsed by top political parties, the commission works to fact-check news publicatio­ns, report fake news to the CNE and pressure Internet providers to limit the distributi­on of disinforma­tion.

In total, more than 30 parties agreed to sign up, including the Justiciali­st Par t y (PJ), PRO and the Civic Coalition (CC). Social networks, including Facebook, Twitter, Google, Instagram and WhatsApp all pledged to work together in order to half the spread of false content.

At the time of the agreement’s signing, Provisiona­l President of the Senate Federico Pinedo quoted famed president Juan Domingo Perón in a remark to newspaper Pagina/12: “‘The kids are alright, but if you control them they’re better.’”

Giving an assist to government efforts are those of factchecki­ng projects like Chequeado and Reverso. Chequeado, with the help of AFP’s Reverso fact-checking programme, have collaborat­ed with Argentina’s top newspaper to curb the flow of disinforma­tion. Newspapers involved in the project include national outlets like Clarín and Pagina/12, along with provincial outlets like Río Negro and La Voz del Interior.

CRUDE ATTEMPTS

Like in many other countries, Argentine fake news is often crude, simplistic and easily produced. Memes or misleading social media posts largely involve the use of fake quotes or photos, cut together with images of historical moments.

In July, for example, the aforementi­oned Pinedo shared an image of Buenos Aires Province gubernator­ial candidate A xel Kicillof with a superimpos­ed quote saying: “Venezuela is the most successful case of income redistribu­tion in the world.” The Senate leader apologised the same day, upon learning the quote was fake.

Peronist politician­s are not innocent either when it comes to sharing questionab­le social media posts. Aníbal Fernández, former Cabinet chief to ex-president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, in August posted a video of Macri interactin­g with a grenadier.

While in the video Macri told the man “One day I would like to be as elegant as you,” the video contains fake subtitles where the grenadier responds: “It’s a pleasure of all. This is the uniform of the HOMELAND, Mr. President!”

Macri and other government officials then laugh at the man. In reality, the man responded, “it would be a pleasure to see you in the uniform of the homeland, Mr. President,” according to Reverso, another factchecki­ng website. By manipulati­ng the grenadier’s reaction to the president, the video hoped to portray Macri and his aides laughing at the man’s exaggerate­d comments.

Fernández later deleted the tweet.

Yet fake news in Argentina dipped into the sophistica­ted during the recent electoral campaign.

In July, a video emerged of Security Minister Patricia Bullrich slurring words, appearing visibly drugged or drunk. The recording sought to play into long standing troupes of Bullrich – the minister in charge of tackling drug-traffickin­g – having a substance abuse problem.

The video was quickly exposed as altered, with the culprits having slowed down and manipulate­d Bullrich’s remarks, in order to distort her voice and give the appearance of inebr iation.

The Security Ministry promptly opened an investigat­ion, saying it traced the video to an associate to the mayor of Paraná, Entre Ríos Province, whom Bullrich has accused of being involved with drug-trafficker­s.

Other anti-Macri fake news has included misleading tweets and memes. At a Palermo campaign event in Aug ust, Macr i decla red: “It doesn’t flood anymore!” Social media was promptly beset by recent videos of floods

Argentine fake news is often crude, simplistic and easily produced. Memes or misleading social media posts largely involve the use of fake quotes or photos, cut together with images of historical moments.

in other parts of the city and countr y claiming to be in exactly the same neighbourh­ood the president was speaking in.

Another savvy attempt at Photoshop meanwhile tried to tarnish the reputation of National Deputy Elisa Carrió, even after August’s PASO primary vote.

Last month, a photo shared 22,000 times on Facebook purported to show Carrió alongside, Facundo Serrano, the governor of Chaco during the last military dictatorsh­ip of 1976-1983, who was a personal friend of dictator Jor

ge Videla. The photo, debunked by AFP as a fraud, included the caption: “Look at this daughter of a bitch, associate of the dictatorsh­ip.”

Other uses of disinforma­tion in the country go beyond politician­s to strike at social issues like immigratio­n and poverty. One post – shared 19,000 times since last February, according to AFP – claimed that 43.5 percent of social welfare beneficiar­ies were foreign immigrants. “Share if you want their deportatio­n,” the post read.

In reality, foreigners make up less than 10 percent of recipients of social spending programmes, AFP’s Reverso reported. For one social programme, which offers subsidies to poor families with children, foreigners make up 1.36 percent of recipients. Yet the crown jewel of online controvers­y in recent memory occurred three nights before August’s primary. As Macri’s election team launched a hashtag campaign, hundreds of bot accounts began tweeting incomprehe­nsible pro-Macri messages using the campaign’s hashtag. While the cause of the bot storm was never known, Cabinet Chief Marcos Peña has long been accused of running bot campaigns to attack political opponents and support Macri’s government. After the bot storm, experts speculated that the government’s campaign had contracted a company to create bots. Yet the company may have misprogram­med them, hence triggering a flurry of poorly designed accounts meant to boost the campaign’s hashtag.

NOT JUST NETWORKS

Further fuelling disinforma­tion, on both sides, is Argentina’s highly-polarised media landscape. Many newspapers, for example, have a clear allegiance between the top political factions.

Partisan newspapers often run with popular narratives intending to damage their political opponents, such as focusing on corruption amongst Fernandez de Kirchner and her allies.

A classic example of newspapers publishing false accounts that fuel otherwise valid narratives dates back to the 2015 general election.

The Clarín newspaper published a front page story claiming Nilda Garre, Fernandez de Kirchner’s former defence minister, managed offshore accounts to funnel money between Argentina, Venezuela and Iran. The existence of the accounts was eventually denied by the US government.

“Fake news isn’t always used through social networks,” explained Leonardo Murolo, a journalist and director of social communicat­ion at the National University of Quilmes. “It can be born through radio, television, or even the top newspaper in Argentina. This is very debilitati­ng for the work of journalism, when it ties itself to longstandi­ng political debates and defends its own interests.”

Misinforma­tion also comes in the form of political marketing and propaganda, yet in Argentina this isn’t always achieved through outright lies or distorted content. For Cambiemos, a recurring campaign tactic is to visit small business owners unannounce­d in socalled ‘ timbreos’, surprising them and capturing their reactions on video.

Yet one recent video, which showed President Mauricio Macri visiting two pizzeria owners, cast doubt on how big of a surprise his visit truly was. As the president enters the kitchen, someone is already filming the owners from inside the pizzeria.

“As the telephone users were already inside the shop, people online were very suspicious that the woman did not know that she was being recorded,” said Ana Slomovich, an investigat­or for CONICET who specialise­s in social networks. “Is this a type of political discourse not fake news? At first it seems as if not because all political discourse – as [Argentine sociologis­t Eliseo] Verón explains – implies a construcci­on, staging. In these videos the staging is so comprehens­ive that it seems there is none at all.”

During the campaign of Macri and Juntos por el Cambio coalition, the use of emotion in political advertisin­g greatly surpassed that of Alberto Fernández and Frente de Todos, according to Slimovich.

“Facing an economic, political and social crisis, we believe their messages focus on the lucid,” Slimovich said. “They mobilise emotions. Messages that argue from passion move away from the president himself and towards other officials and citizens.”

Unlike Brazil, where a massive fake news campaign in support of then-candidate Jair Bolsonaro is believed to have had an effect on the beliefs of voters, most experts feel disinforma­tion was not decisive in the final tally of August’s primary vote.

“Just because one party is better than the other in a strateg y of disinfor mation, it doesn’t necessaril­y determine who wins an election,” said Chequeado’s Zommer.

With Macri’s long-shot election efforts lurching back to life again, the polarisati­on caused by fake news in the primary election has yet to disappear, ensuring the role of disinforma­tion in the day-to-day cycle of news in Argentina.

“I think that the most challengin­g thing is convincing people that there isn’t only disinforma­tion from the candidate you don’t like,” Zoommer added. “A Kirchneris­ta should accept that Kirchneris­mo disinforms and a Cambienist­a should also accept that Cambiemos disinforms.”

With Macri’s longshot election efforts lurching back to life again, the polarisati­on caused by fake news in the primary election has yet to disappear, ensuring the role of disinforma­tion in the day-to-day cycle of news in Argentina.

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