Toronto Star

Russia tried to influence EU elections, report says

Groups spread misinforma­tion on social media about divisive topics such as immigratio­n

- ADAM SATARIANO

LONDON— European authoritie­s Friday blamed Russia for a misinforma­tion campaign designed to depress voter turnout in last month’s European Union elections and warned that new rules might be needed to force internet platforms to do more to stop the spread of false news.

Aprelimina­ry review of the parliament­ary elections by the European Commission and the bloc’s foreign policy and security arm found an effort by Russian-linked groups and other nonstate actors to undermine credibilit­y in the European Union through social media. The initiative tried to spread misinforma­tion about divisive topics such as immigratio­n and major events like the cause of the Notre-Dame fire in Paris.

“The evidence collected revealed a continued and sustained disinforma­tion activity by Russian sources aiming to suppress turnout and influence voter preference­s,” the report said. “There was a consistent trend of malicious actors using disinforma­tion to promote extreme views and polarize local debates, including through unfounded attacks on the E.U.”

European officials did not provide details about what groups in Russia or elsewhere were behind the campaigns. The report also stopped short of assessing whether the efforts had an impact on how people voted, although turnout in the elections reached a 25-year high. Instead, the report largely cited the findings of outside researcher­s who had been tracking the European elections.

Independen­t investigat­ors had warned that the region remained vulnerable to misinforma­tion campaigns ahead of last month’s vote.

Reports highlighte­d efforts by Russia-linked groups and those in favour of far-right policies to use Facebook and Twitter to spread false informatio­n and exaggerate political divisions.

Facebook blocked more than 1,700 pages, groups and accounts engaged in inauthenti­c behaviour targeting European Union countries during the first three months of 2019, the report said. Voters in Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Poland and Spain were among those targeted.

The report said new internet regulation­s might be needed rather than relying on the companies to abide by a voluntary code of conduct. The European Commission said it would complete a review by the end of the year that could result in new laws.

“More needs to be done by the platforms to effectivel­y tackle disinforma­tion,” the report said.

Facebook said it took several steps to protect the integrity of the European elections, including entering into partnershi­ps with local fact-check organizati­ons, adopting new rules to show who is buying political ads on its platform, and dedicating teams of employees to monitor election interferen­ce.

“The fight against false news will never be over,” Facebook said in a statement in response to the European Commission report. “That is why we are making significan­t investment­s to remove fake accounts and clickbait and to promote high-quality journalism and news literacy.”

Twitter and Google did not respond to requests for comment.

Last month’s vote was seen as a referendum on the direction of Europe. On one side were nationalis­t and populist groups skeptical of the European Union’s influence on national affairs; on the other were those seeking more integratio­n and co-operation. The final results were mixed, with far-right groups performing well in some countries, and liberal parties doing better in others.

The election demonstrat­ed a broader shift in strategy for those engaged in misinforma­tion. The report said the efforts were smaller and more localized than Russia’s widespread effort seen during the 2016 U.S. presidenti­al campaign.

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