Malta Independent

‘Fake news’ is briefly focus of French presidenti­al campaign

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Days ahead of Sunday’s run-off vote between centrist Emmanuel Macron and his far-right rival Marine Le Pen, “fake news” briefly took center stage in the French presidenti­al election.

Speaking during their only oneon-one debate Wednesday, Le Pen told her rival: “I hope we won’t find out you have an offshore account in the Bahamas.”

She appeared to be referencin­g two sets of apparent forgeries, published a couple of hours before Wednesday’s heated showdown, that purported to show that Macron was somehow involved with a Caribbean bank and a firm based on the island of Nevis.

Le Pen quickly backed away from the suggestion as the rumors were debunked the next day. The documents are obvious fakes: the “M’’ in Macron’s purported signature didn’t match his genuine sign-off, and whoever wrote the documents appeared confused as to whether the firm in question was a limited company or a limited liability corporatio­n. Metadata embedded in the document suggest it was created just before being posted online — underminin­g the anonymous poster’s claim to have circulated the documents to “hundreds of French journalist­s” who had “all sat on this.”

Asked Thursday on BFM TV whether she was formally accusing Macron of having a secret offshore account, Le Pen said: “Not at all. If I wanted to do so I would have done it yesterday. I’ve just asked him the question. If I had proof, I would have claimed it yesterday.”

Macron’s camp said the former investment banker was victim of a “cyber misinforma­tion campaign.”

Speaking on France Inter radio, Macron blamed Le Pen for spreading “fake news” and said he never held a bank account “in any tax haven whatsoever.”

“All this is factually inaccurate,” Macron said.

Le Pen and Macron face off in the presidenti­al runoff Sunday. The latest opinion polls show the pro-EU Macron holding a strong lead over his far-right rival ahead of Sunday’s vote.

The election has been shot through with fears by some that outside forces would somehow interfere. Despite slim evidence supporting such claims, French commentato­rs have become highly sensitive to rumors and conspiraci­es and the networks that disseminat­e them.

The provenance of the latest conspiracy theory isn’t clear, but there are hints tying the faked documents to far-right circles in California.

One of the documents, for example, purports to have been drawn up under the laws of Nevis but actually draws some of its language from a guide to forming limited liability companies in California. The documents first appeared on Mixtape, a relatively new northern California­based file sharing service. And the Macron campaign identified the first tweet referring to the documents as coming from the Twitter account of Nathan Damigo, a far-right activist and convicted felon also based out of northern California.

Damigo recently won a measure of social media notoriety for punching a female anti-fascist militant in the face at a protest in Berkeley and had recently promoted French far-right content online.

Messages left with Damigo weren’t immediatel­y returned.

French media unanimousl­y criticised the poor quality of the only face-to-face televised debate between the two contenders. Le Pen got most of the blame for dragging the conversati­on down and opting for aggression from the start. She defended her aggressive stance on Thursday, saying a “severe” tone was required because “what is at stake is essential.”

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