Social media's 'spoil the vote' campaign helped spread disinformation, report says

The Institute for Strategic Dialogue and Hope and Courage Collective said there was 'an online environment in which anti-migrant and anti-LGBTQ+ sentiments were expressed as supposed defences of democracy or moral order'
Social media's 'spoil the vote' campaign helped spread disinformation, report says

A spoiled vote at the Presidential election found at Mallow GAA complex on the morning of counting. The groups said while discussing spoiling your vote is not a threat to election integrity, images showing explicit forms of hatred on spoiled ballots circulated online. File picture: Larry Cummins

The “spoil the vote” campaign on social media facilitated the spread of election disinformation, anti-migrant and anti-LGBTQ+ hate, while candidates faced a slew of personal attacks online during the presidential campaign, a new report has found.

An investigation from the Institute for Strategic Dialogue and Hope and Courage Collective said, while a legitimate democratic exercise, images of spoiled votes being shared online “allowed racist and far-right messaging to blend with broader narratives related to political disillusionment and legitimate civic protest”.

Already a subscriber? Sign in

You have reached your article limit.

Unlimited access. Half the price.

Annual €130 €65

Best value

Monthly €12€6 / month

More in this section

Politics

Newsletter

From the corridors of power to your inbox ... sign up for your essential weekly political briefing.

Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited