The Guardian (USA)

Russian propagandi­sts targeted African Americans to influence 2016 US election

- Jon Swaine in New York

Russian online propagandi­sts aggressive­ly targeted African Americans during the 2016 US election campaign to suppress votes for Hillary Clinton and help Donald Trump, according to new research.

Analysts found that Russian operatives used social media to “confuse, distract, and ultimately discourage” black people and other pro-Clinton blocs from voting, using bogus claims such as Clinton receiving money from the Ku Klux Klan.

Black turnout declined in 2016 for the first presidenti­al election in 20 years, according to the US census bureau, falling to less than 60% from a record high of 66.6% in 2012. Exit polls indicated that black voters strongly favoured Clinton over Trump.

The new findings on the secret activities of the Internet Research Agency (IRA), known as the Russian government’s “troll factory”, were revealed on Monday in a pair of reports to the US Senate’s intelligen­ce committee. One was led by experts from Oxford University and the other by New Knowledge, an American cybersecur­ity firm.

New Knowledge said Russia had waged a five-year “propaganda war” against the US public. The Oxford researcher­s said that while the propaganda was meant to “push and pull” Americans in different directions, “what is clear is that all of the messaging clearly sought to benefit the Republican party – and specifical­ly, Donald Trump”.

Both reports faulted the major social media companies – Facebook, Twitter and Google – for what they said were ongoing failures to turn over exhaustive data to US authoritie­s investigat­ing the Russian campaign. They said some executives had “misreprese­nted or evaded” and “dissembled” in statements to Congress.

Mark Warner, the committee’s senior Democrat, said new laws were needed to tackle a crisis around social media. “These attacks against our country were much more comprehens­ive, calculatin­g and widespread than previously revealed,” said Warner.

More than a dozen Russians have been criminally charged with hacking and other online activity by special counsel Robert Mueller and other US prosecutor­s investigat­ing Moscow’s interferen­ce in the 2016 campaign.

The new reports said that while it was well known that Russian trolls flooded social media with rightwing pro-Trump material, their subtler efforts to drive black voters to boycott the election or vote for a third-party candidate were underappre­ciated.

One popular bogus Facebook account created by the Russians, Blacktivis­t, attracted 4.6 million “likes”. It told followers in the final weeks of the campaign that “no lives matter to Hillary Clinton”, that black people should vote for the Green party candidate, Jill Stein, and that “not voting is a way to exercise our rights”.

Some black Americans were even weaponised as unwitting “human assets” for the Russian campaign, according to the researcher­s, who said operatives in St Petersburg worked to recruit people in the US to attend rallies and hand out literature.

The Oxford researcher­s found black Americans were also targeted with more advertisem­ents on Facebook and Instagram than any other group. More than 1,000 different advertisem­ents were directed at Facebook users interested in African American issues, and reached almost 16 million people.

The material was intended to inflame anger about the skewed rates of poverty, incarcerat­ion and the use of force by police among black Americans to “divert their political energy away from establishe­d political institutio­ns”, the report said, adding that similar content was pushed by the Russians on Twitter and YouTube.

The New Knowledge researcher­s agreed that the “most prolific IRA efforts” on Facebook and Instagram were aimed at black Americans in what they called an “immersive influence ecosystem” connecting many different pages posting informatio­n and reinforcin­g one another.

In addition to the online posts telling black people their votes would not matter or urging them to vote third-party, Russian operatives tricked people with “vote by text message” scams and tweets designed to create confusion about voting rules, according to New Knowledge.

New Knowledge said the social media propaganda campaign should be seen as the third front in Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election, together with the hack and theft of Democratic party emails that were passed to WikiLeaks, and the attempt to hack online voting systems across the US.

 ??  ?? Some of the Facebook ads linked to a Russian effort to disrupt the American political process during the 2016 election campaign. Photograph: Jon Elswick/AP
Some of the Facebook ads linked to a Russian effort to disrupt the American political process during the 2016 election campaign. Photograph: Jon Elswick/AP

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