The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Inside the ‘big wave’ of misinforma­tion targeted at Latinos

- By Amanda Seitz and Will Weissert

WASHINGTON » Before last year’s presidenti­al election, Facebook ads targeting Latino voters described Joe Biden as a communist. During his inaugurati­on, another conspiracy theory spread online and on Spanish-language radio warning that a brooch worn by Lady Gaga signaled Biden was working with shadowy, leftist figures abroad.

And in the final stretch of Virginia’s election for governor, stories written in Spanish accused Biden of ordering the arrest of a man during a school board meeting.

None of that was true. But such misinforma­tion represents a growing threat to Democrats, who are anxious about their standing with Latino voters after surprise losses last year in places including South Florida and the Rio Grande Valley in Texas.

Heading into a midterm election in which control of Congress is at stake, lawmakers, researcher­s and activists are preparing for another onslaught of falsehoods targeted at Spanishspe­aking voters. And they say social-media platforms that often host those mistruths aren’t prepared.

“For a lot of people, there’s a lot of concern that 2022 will be another big wave,” said Guy Mentel, executive director of Global Americans, a think tank that provides analysis of key issues throughout the Americas.

Looking ahead

This month’s elections may be a preview of what is to come:

• After Democratic incumbent Phil Murphy won New Jersey’s close governor’s race, Spanish-language videos falsely claimed the vote was rigged, despite no evidence of widespread voter fraud, a fact the Republican candidate acknowledg­ed, calling the results “legal and fair.”

• In Virginia, where Republican Glenn Youngkin campaigned successful­ly on promises to defend “parental rights” in classrooms, false headlines around a controvers­ial school board meeting emerged.

“Biden ordenó arrestar a padre de una joven violada por un trans,” read one of several misleading articles, translatin­g to “Biden ordered the arrest of a father whose daughter was raped by a trans.”

The mistruth was spun from an altercatio­n during a chaotic school board meeting months earlier in Loudoun County that resulted in the arrest of a father whose daughter was sexually assaulted in a bathroom by another student. The father claimed the suspect was “gender fluid,” which sparked outcry over the school’s policy allowing transgende­r students to use bathrooms matching their gender identity.

In reality, the White House wasn’t involved with the meeting. The man was arrested by the local sheriff’s department. It is also unclear how the suspect identifies.

Loudoun County was already the epicenter of a heated political debate over how the history of racism is taught in schools, another issue that became fodder for misinforma­tion and political attacks on Spanish-language websites this summer, said Maria Teresa Kumar, president and CEO of Voto Latino, a nonprofit that mobilizes Latinos to become politicall­y engaged.

“It has everything to do with trust in institutio­ns. Trust in government,” said

Kumar, whose group works to combat the misinforma­tion. “Eroding that trust will transfer not just to voting in the midterms, but just overall disengagem­ent from your government.”

Stretched truths accusing some Democrats of being socialists or communists could also dominate the online narrative, said Diego Groisman, a research analyst at New York University’s Cybersecur­ity for Democracy project.

During the 2020 election, Groisman flagged Facebook ads targeting Latino voters

in Texas and Florida that described Biden as a “communist.” The ads in Florida, where a majority of the country’s Venezuelan population is concentrat­ed, compared Biden to that country’s socialist President Nicolás Maduro.

“There were clearly specific Spanish-speaking communitie­s that were being targeted,” said Laura Edelson, the lead researcher for NYU’s program.

Stirring ‘fear’

Evelyn Pérez-Verdía, a Florida Democratic strategist who watches Spanish misinforma­tion patterns, says many online narratives intentiona­lly stoke “fear in the Spanish-speaking communitie­s.”

One conspiracy theory mentioned on talk radio grew out of Lady Gaga’s golden bird brooch at Biden’s inaugurati­on. Some spreading the claim noted a similar brooch once worn by Claudia López Hernandez, the first openly gay mayor of Bogota, Colombia, signaled the new president was working with foreign leftists.

“They’re not going to stop. They’re going to double down on it,” Pérez-Verdía said of the misinforma­tion.

Critics argue that socialmedi­a companies like Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, have placed outsize attention on removing or factchecki­ng misinforma­tion in English over other languages including Spanish.

Facebook’s documents, leaked by ex-Facebook employee turned whistleblo­wer Frances Haugen earlier this year, echo those concerns. Haugen said the company spends 87% of its misinforma­tion budget on U.S. content, a figure that Meta spokespers­on Kevin McAllister said is “out of context.”

‘Basically non-existent’

An internal Facebook memo, written in March, revealed the company’s ability to detect anti-vaccine rhetoric and misinforma­tion was “basically nonexisten­t” in non-English comments.

Last year, for example, Instagram and Facebook banned “#plandemic,” a hashtag associated with a video full of COVID-19 conspiracy theories. Yet users were spreading misinforma­tion on the platforms using “#plandemia,” the Spanish version of the hashtag, until last month.

An analysis last year by Avaaz, a left-leaning advocacy group that tracks online misinforma­tion, also found Facebook failed to flag 70% of Spanish-language misinforma­tion surroundin­g COVID-19, compared to 29% of such informatio­n in English.

McAllister said the company removes false Spanish-language claims about voter fraud, COVID-19 and vaccines. Four news outlets, including The Associated Press, also fact-check Spanish-language falsehoods circulatin­g around U.S. content on Instagram and Facebook.

Meanwhile, researcher­s at the nonpartisa­n Global Disinforma­tion Index estimated that Google will make $12 million this year off ads on websites that peddled COVID-19 disinforma­tion in Spanish.

Google has “stopped serving ads on a majority of the pages shared in the report,” company spokespers­on Michael Aciman said in an email.

“Spanish-language misinforma­tion campaigns are absolutely exploding on social media platforms like Facebook, WhatsApp, etc.,” New York Democratic Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, one of the party’s top progressiv­e voices, tweeted after the Nov. 2 election.

That explosion is fueled in part by a U.S.-Latin America feedback loop that allows falsehoods to fester.

Misinforma­tion that starts on U.S. websites is sometimes translated by social-media pages in Latin American countries like Colombia and Venezuela. The inaccuraci­es are shared back through YouTube videos or messaging apps with Spanish speakers in expatriate communitie­s including those in Miami and Houston.

Those falsehoods are more likely to reach U.S. Latinos because they tend to spend more time on sites such as YouTube, WhatsApp, Instagram and Telegram, according to an October Nielsen report.

“We see YouTube accounts or radio stations churning out mis- or disinforma­tion regarding a whole range of things that they pick up from fringe U.S. outlets,” Mentel said.

Some are working to fill the void of reliable informatio­n in those communitie­s.

The Oakland, Calif., news service El Timpano delivers a text message of local news in Spanish to roughly 2,000 subscriber­s every week. Subscriber­s can text back with questions that staffers work to answer, said Madeleine Blair, who launched El Timpano.

 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? Stickers say in Spanish, “He Votado Hoy,” or, “I Voted Today,” at a polling place in Philadelph­ia on May 21, 2019. This month’s elections may have offered a preview of the Spanish-language misinforma­tion.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE Stickers say in Spanish, “He Votado Hoy,” or, “I Voted Today,” at a polling place in Philadelph­ia on May 21, 2019. This month’s elections may have offered a preview of the Spanish-language misinforma­tion.

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