Facebook ads funded by 'dark money' are the right's weapon for 2020
In the weeks leading up to a tightly contested 2018
midterm election in Virginia, a Facebook page called “Wacky Wexton Not” ran an
ad that pictured Democratic congressional candidate Jennifer Wexton next to
Nazi troops. Another labeled her an “evil socialist”. Yet another referenced
Nazi uniforms, stating, “Wexton and her modern day brown shirts. They Are Evil.
They Hate America. They Hate You.”
Who spent $211 launching 24 anti-Wexton ads? It’s
unclear. The ads state they were “Paid for by a freedom loving American Citizen
exercising my natural law right, protected by the 1st Amendment and protected
by the 2nd Amendment.” But there’s nothing in them – or in Facebook’s new ad
library that’s designed to shine light on who’s funding political adss – that
provides personal information about the person or group behind the attack on
Wexton (who won her race).
This small incident highlights a bigger problem as
the 2020 election looms. How so-called untraceable “dark money” Facebook ads
persist via easily exploitable loopholes in the ad archive, a database created
in response to foreign interference and disinformation campaigns during the
2016 election. Now heading into the 2020 election, dark money ads remain a
potent political weapon that the Republican party and conservative media in
particular are using to push a rightwing agenda and get Donald Trump
re-elected.
“You can still have a huge impact by spending very
little,” said Anna Massoglia, a researcher with the Center For Responsive
Politics (CPR) who tracks dark money spending on Facebook ads. Over $600m has
been spent on political Facebook ads since the platform made data public in May
2018. It’s unclear how much was spent on dark money ads, though CPR and other
groups are in the process of tallying it up.
Facebook
rules require those who run political pages to provide government
identification so they can be ‘verified’, but there’s nothing to stop foreign
interests from hiring an ad buyer with a US ID.
The most common dark money ads can be placed into
two categories. One includes more traditional political ads from household
names of dark money nonprofits like Judicial Watch, America First Policies or
even Planned Parenthood on the left. Those are typically linked to the
political establishment, and though the nonprofit names are attached to the
ads, the groups don’t reveal their donors.
But those like the “Wacky Wexton” ads can be
launched by anyone, domestic or foreign, group or person. Facebook rules
require those who run political pages to provide government identification so
they can be “verified”, but there’s nothing to stop foreign interests from
hiring an ad buyer with a US ID, or using an affiliate company in the US.
Facebook then protects its ad buyers by not divulging any personal information.
“Even though you are required to put something in
the disclaimers, it’s not meaningful. You don’t get the name of who’s writing
the text,” Massoglia said.
The right and left also use dark money ads to push
their agendas and content. Most such pages on the right are small operations
that run multiple Facebook pages pushing a conservative agenda, praising Trump
and attacking liberal politicians.
The anonymous individual or groups behind the pages
also sometimes misrepresent their purpose. They are what Laura Edelson, a New
York University researcher with the Online Political Ads Transparency Project,
calls “inauthentic communities”.
Such pages are usually centered around an identity.
“On the right, the identity is ‘conservative’,” Edelson said, and “what they’re
really trying to do is get your email address – they’re building lists.”
Among those is I Love My Freedom, which sends out
ads attacking Democratic politicians like Nancy Pelosi and ultimately attempts
to solicit users’ names and email addresses. Its pages – with names like
“President Trump’s Patriot Army” and “President Donald Trump Fan Club” – also
hawk “limited edition” Trump coins and other gear, which sources say is a
common practice in the right’s dark money advertising.
Another group of Facebook pages that are less
clearly linked include Patriot News Alerts, Breaking Patriot News, The Daily
Conservative and The Conservative Institute.
Anatomy of a dark money Facebook ad network
On 4 April, the Patriot News Alert Facebook page
sent out fewer than 100 ads that largely targeted women over 55, many of whom
were in Florida, Texas and California. The ads showed a picture of
congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez with text that called her Green New Deal
plan not just “crazy”, but “scary”. The text continues with false claims that
the Green New Deal would “ban air travel, get rid of gasoline cars, eliminate
meat, remodel all existing homes, and guarantee income to all Americans too
lazy to work”.
Around the same time, Breaking Patriot News and The
Daily Conservative sent out about 85 nearly identical ads largely
micro-targeting carefully selected demographics of Facebook users throughout
the country.
The pages spent between about $1,660 and $15,000 to
buy the ads, reaping between 112,000 and 418,000 impressions.
The three pages didn’t reveal their relation to
those that they targeted, and there’s nothing in the ads that provides an idea
of who paid for them. In her research, Edelson found that the three pages used
the same ad, and Facebook’s archive shows that they share other ads that attack
Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders.
Clicking on an ad reveals some clues about the
network of pages’ goals, which is to funnel Facebook users to rightwing blogs
running largely pro-Trump stories and pushing conservative ideas.
The ad that women over 55 in Florida may have
clicked on takes one to PatriotNewsAlerts.com where the reader is encouraged to
sign a petition “To say ‘No’ to the Green New Deal,” but the “signature” it
requires is a name and email address.
A Guardian reporter who submitted a name and email
address later received an email from Patriot News Alerts with a link to a story
on the Patriot News Alert blog. There’s no information about who runs the blog,
but the Guardian searched the name and found it appears to be linked to
conservative blogger Shaun Connell.
Connell signs several blogposts as the pages’
founder, and Patriot News Alerts shares the same Connecticut address as several
other blogs. Connell is also behind Breaking Patriot News and The Daily
Conservative, and the blogs are presented in a similar layout to and include
some of the same writers as other right wing blogs that can be linked to
Connell, like Daily Christian News.
While one end goal seems to be to push Connell’s
rightwing viewpoint, another seems to be to drive traffic to his pages. It’s
unclear if Connell funds the Facebook ads himself, if there are other funders
involved, or whether there’s a more commercial purpose at play – some pages
sell the Facebook data they collect.
Connell didn’t return an email from the Guardian
seeking comment.
The four Connell-linked Facebook pages have spent
about $300,000 since being created between July 2017 and September 2018.
Edlelson said she tracks dozens of similar pages on
the left and right, and there are probably many more.
“The tactic started and was perfected on the right,
but once you have a political tactic like this, everyone will use it,
especially when it’s this easy,” Edelson said.