Abstract

As fake news elicits an emotional response from users, whose attention is then monetised, political advertising has a significant influence on its production and dissemination. Facebook ads, therefore, have an essential role in contemporary political communication, not only because of their extensive use in international political campaigns, but also because they address intriguing questions about the regulation of disinformation on social networking sites. This research employs a corpus of 14,684 Facebook ads published by the major national political parties during their campaigns leading up to the two Spanish general elections held in 2019. A manual content analysis was performed on all the visually identical ads so as to identify those containing disinformation and those denouncing it. The topics addressed in these ads were then examined. The results show that the political parties’ Facebook ad strategies were akin to those of conventional advertising. Disinformation messages were infrequent and mainly posted by Ciudadanos and VOX. Nonetheless, it is striking that the main topic addressed in the ads was the unity of Spain—precisely the issue of Catalonia’s independence. In light of this, it can be deduced that ‘traditional’ parties are taking longer to renounce classical forms of campaigning than their ‘new’ counterparts, thus demonstrating that the actors implementing disinformation strategies are not only restricted to the extreme right of the ideological spectrum.

Highlights

  • The phenomenon of digital disinformation has become relevant in recent years, due to its widespread use in many countries (Bradshaw & Howard, 2019), and because of the Internet’s capacity to amplify it, which, in turn, has repercussions for political life insofar as it undermines reliable information sources (Benkler, Faris, & Roberts, 2018; Bennett & Livingston, 2018)

  • Some of those repercussions are unforeseen, others are clearly intentional. Campaigns of this sort are mainly launched on social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and WhatsApp, and the main techniques are based on the use of bots and trolls

  • The presence of disinformation in the electoral propaganda distributed on Facebook by the five main Spanish political parties during the two 2019 general election campaigns was, as can be seen from the data, negligible

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Summary

Introduction

The phenomenon of digital disinformation has become relevant in recent years, due to its widespread use in many countries (Bradshaw & Howard, 2019), and because of the Internet’s capacity to amplify it, which, in turn, has repercussions for political life insofar as it undermines reliable information sources (Benkler, Faris, & Roberts, 2018; Bennett & Livingston, 2018). Some of those repercussions are unforeseen, others are clearly intentional. As such content was inaccessible only a few years ago, research on digital disinformation has yet to explore political advertising on Facebook

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