Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Campaign goes virtual: Millions spent on social media ads

- By Sandran Rubatheesa­n

Sri Lankan political candidates have spent up to US$ 234,692 ( more than Rs 43.5mn) on 15,860 election- related publicity on Facebook and its other platforms including Instagram since nomination­s were handed over, according to the social media site’s Ad Library which publishes expenditur­e details of advertisem­ent that appear on user timelines.

This amount had been spent by Wednesday. It was an increase of nearly 300 percent when compared to the amount recorded on July 5, by which time nearly US$ 60,000 (Rs 11.4mn) had been spent on some 4,808 social media election advertisem­ents by leading politician­s and well-funded candidates.

Ad Library contains informatio­n about advertisem­ents on politics, elections and social issues. There has been a spike in social and electronic media use in Sri Lanka amidst health regulation­s spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic and the strict implementa­tion of laws by the Election Commission.

On Facebook, Sri Lanka’s best-known social media site with 6.2 million active users, candidates pay around US$ 100 ( Rs 18,500) to simply boost their own pages or around US$ 400 ( Rs 74,200) to target users in a specific geographic­al location of the country with tailored advertisem­ents.

There was a 291 percent increase in expenditur­e in just two weeks, boosted by political advertisem­ents. The highest total was spent in the Western Province-- US$ 106,804 ( Rs 19.8mn)-- on Facebook advertisem­ents while the North Central Province recorded the lowest sum at USD 4,745 (Rs 881,060) in the past 30 days.

Meanwhile, the Election Campaign Cost Monitoring Unit of the Centre for Monitoring Election Violence (CMEV) which keeps a tab on social media sites in addition to electronic and print media said it recorded Rs 514 million spent on election campaign activities. The election watchdog predicted that political campaignin­g on social media would increase significan­tly in the final race towards the finish.

CMEV National Coordinato­r Manjula Gajanayake said most of the 208 former legislator­s who were seeking to return to Parliament and some other well- funded candidates were spending millions during the past few weeks across multiple platforms.

He said they were also monitoring hundreds of politicall­y biased gossip we b s i t e s t h at we r e carrying out an aggressive campaign on behalf of candidates.

“More than 90 percent of those websites are funded by the candidates and eng ag ed in election campaignin­g openly,” he observed. “The administra­tors of these websites behave like spin doctors planting positive s t o r i e s ab o u t their r e s p e c t i ve funding candidates while spreading false reports and fake news about other candidates for political gains.”

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