Yorkshire Post

Tighten rules on election spending on social media, report urges

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NEW RESTRICTIO­NS on election spending and social media campaignin­g have been called for.

A report funded by the Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust (JRRT) says that electoral law needs to be updated to keep pace with modern technology.

The study called for social media giants like Facebook to be forced to release geographic­al data on adverts by political parties to pinpoint election spending across constituen­cies. It urged the Government to go further and ban paid-for political advertisin­g on social media as it is on TV.

New spending rules should be brought in that would increase limits for individual candidates and lower those for national parties, the study said.

Public funding for parties, paid for by a cut in the Government advertisin­g budget, and a switch to proportion­al representa­tion to end targeting of marginal seats should be considered, according to the JRRT-backed report.

The study’s author, journalist and former Liberal Democrat election candidate Chris Bowers, said: “We’re at a really critical time in British politics. We are under pressure to adopt many American techniques, yet unlike America we have the principle that elections shouldn’t be fought on the basis of who has most money but who has the best arguments, programmes and people.

“Now with social media rewriting so much of the way electionee­ring happens, it’s vital for the public’s confidence in the voting system that we make sure the rules actually do the job they were drawn up for.”

JRRT’s chief executive Fiona Weir said: “We hope for a positive reaction from Ministers, following their indication that the Government is committed to ‘incrementa­l reform’.”

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