The Gold Coast Bulletin

Albo online grease

- JENNIFER DUDLEY-NICHOLSON

QUEENSLAND has become a major target in an election ad spending spree on Facebook, with minor parties splashing major cash for a chance to pick up a Senate seat.

Mining magnate Clive Palmer and former premier Campbell Newman are locked in a spending battle on the social network, with each paying more than $30,000 for Facebook ads since the election was called.

Mr Palmer’s United Australia Party has spent more than $15.2m on election ads with Google, including $1m in a week.

Labor is splashing four times as much cash on social media as the Liberal Party, even running 330 Facebook ads simultaneo­usly.

But the Liberals have been creating dirtier attack ads for Facebook and, according to experts, have been taking a more targeted approach that could pay off.

Queensland voters have become the biggest targets for Senate advertisin­g on Facebook this election by a huge margin, according to the University of Queensland, with more than $101,000 spent on Senate ads since April 10, dwarfing investment­s in Tasmania and South Australia.

The United Australia Party and Liberal Democrats make up more than $68,000 of that tally as they battle for a seat, followed by Liberal senator Amanda Stoker, Greens senator Larissa Waters, and Labor senator Anthony Chisholm.

Facebook election ad spending has also been high in the seat of Brisbane, where Labor candidate Madonna Jarrett has outspent sitting Liberal MP Trevor Evans by five times.

UQ political scientist Glenn Kefford, who created a tool to crunch Facebook ad data, said this election had seen much higher spending on social media due to its growing audience and the bigger budgets of independen­t candidates.

“The amount of money the independen­ts are spending is really significan­t and unpreceden­ted historical­ly,” he said. “Some of them are spending $4000 or $5000 a week on Instagram ads. Candidates from major parties don’t normally spend that.”

An analysis of the major political parties’ spending across both Facebook and Google platforms showed Labor and its leader paid more than $247,000 for Facebook ads and $223,000 on Google ads in a week.

The Liberal Party and Prime Minister Scott Morrison spent less than half that amount on its Google and Facebook ads combined.

Australian National University political marketing expert Andrew Hughes said the parties’ online spending exposed different campaign strategies.

Labor was taking a “broad target” approach, he said, with big spending designed to spread its message nationwide, and lock in existing supporters.

The party had invested in more negative ads towards the campaign’s halfway point to target undecided voters. “Just because you’re running hundreds of ads does not mean that it’s going to be successful and it does not mean you’re good at digital. It’s like getting 58 text messages from someone trying to ask you out on a date,” Dr Hughes said.

 ?? Picture: Nigel Hallett ?? United Australia Party boss Clive Palmer has spent $15m on election ads online.
Picture: Nigel Hallett United Australia Party boss Clive Palmer has spent $15m on election ads online.
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