The Press

Labor intensifie­s online campaign

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Labor is using the final days of the campaign to blast Facebook and Instagram with negative advertisem­ents attacking Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s character, as part of a digital strategy that has poured vastly more dollars into its online campaign than the Coalition.

The digital barrage is expected to intensify as the broadcasti­ng blackout kicked in from midnight, banning election advertisin­g on television or radio until the close of polls on Saturday, but leaving a free-for-all online. Print media is also not covered by the blackout, which is mandated by federal broadcasti­ng laws.

Labor has spent more than $1.4 million on ads promoted by its official ALP Facebook and Instagram pages in the past month – half of it splashed on a flurry of ads over the course of last week ending May 14, according to the latest available data from Facebook’s Ad Library.

By comparison, the Liberal Party has spent just $270,000 through its central social media accounts over the past 30 days, of which about $126,000 was spent in the seven days to May 14 – the second-to-last week of the campaign.

Labor is also outspendin­g its opponent on YouTube, where it has forked out about $1.5m on ads since the beginning of April, compared with $680,000 from the Liberals, according to Google’s Ad Transparen­cy report. However, Clive Palmer’s United Australia Party is wildly outspendin­g both, splashing almost $7m on YouTube ads since early April as part of an $18m spend since August.

Dr Glenn Kefford, a political scientist at the University of Queensland who has been analysing the social media ad spend by parties during the campaign, said Labor appeared to have learned the lessons from its shock election defeat in 2019.

‘‘The headline takeaway from this election is really Labor’s response to what happened in 2019. In their post election review, they recognised that they were pretty significan­tly trounced online and this time around they’ve clearly made this a really big focus of the campaign,’’ Kefford said.

‘‘The various Labor funding entities have really spent a lot of money. If you compare that spend with the Liberal Party state divisions, as well as just the central Liberal campaign, Labor is spending in the order of three or four to one.’’

A key conclusion of Labor’s internal 2019 election postmortem was the party had been outgunned by the Coalition online, despite a 160 per cent increase in its digital advertisin­g budget compared with its 2016 campaign. The report identified a lack of digital literacy in the party’s senior ranks, and found an ‘‘urgent need to dramatical­ly improve its digital campaignin­g capability’’.

Both camps have launched about 20 negative ads each across the two platforms in the past two days alone. Labor is seeking to hammer home the themes of accountabi­lity and trust, with ads featuring video or still images of Morrison with text saying ‘‘it’s not my job’’, ‘‘I don’t hold a hose’’, and ‘‘it’s not a race’’.

The Liberal ads are primarily targeted at Labor’s economic management, with the bucket ad that has been on high rotation on television also adapted for online. It features a bucket with a hole in and money spilling out along with the jingle: ‘‘There’s a hole in your budget, dear Labor.’’

Marketing strategist Toby Ralph, who worked on John Howard’s election campaigns, said voters could expect to be deluged with last-minute scare ads in the final run to polling day.

‘‘Once the TV and radio press cuts out, you’re going to see social media ramp up and you’re going to see all sorts of last minute scares popping up,’’ he said.

‘‘As the campaign progresses, you get ever more negative because you’re all about proving that the other side are incapable of running the country.’’

Ralph believes that Labor is winning the advertisin­g war, singling out the ‘‘it’s not my job’’ ad as the most effective of the campaign.

‘‘Their ads are better and have more cut through. The Liberals are right to concentrat­e on economy, but their only hope frankly is to really scare people that Labor is going to screw it up,’’ he said. ‘‘I think the response to ‘It’s not easy under Albanese’ is, it hasn’t been easy under you either. That’s the problem.’’

Tokyo summit

Albanese said yesterday that he will begin rebuilding trust in his nation if he wins weekend elections and attends a summit with US, Indian and Japanese leaders in Tokyo just three days later.

Albanese said he will be ‘‘completely consistent’’ with the current administra­tion on Chinese strategic competitio­n in the region if he travels to the summit of the Indo-Pacific strategic alliance known as the Quad on Tuesday.

But he said Australia had been placed in the ‘‘naughty corner’’ in United Nation’s climate change negotiatio­ns by refusing to adopt more ambitious emissions reduction targets at a November conference.

Morrison yesterday would not say who might represent Australia in Tokyo. He said there were ‘‘convention­s in place’’ to deal with the election.

Albanese has said he would have himself sworn in as prime minister as soon as Sunday or Monday in order to attend the summit.

Sydney University constituti­onal law expert Anne Twomey said Morrison would have to resign as prime minister before Governor General David Hurley could swear in Albanese. –

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Labor leader Anthony Albanese in Canberra and Prime Minister Scott Morrison in Melbourne have just two days to go on the campaign trail until the general election on Saturday.
GETTY IMAGES Labor leader Anthony Albanese in Canberra and Prime Minister Scott Morrison in Melbourne have just two days to go on the campaign trail until the general election on Saturday.

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