Last week, Meta announced that it is allowing former President Donald Trump back on its social media platforms, along with promising that there will be “new guardrails in place to deter repeat offenses.” However, a new study from Media Matters shows that the company struggled to combat election misinformation in 2022, even before letting the leader of the election denial movement back on its platforms.
Media Matters previously found that right-leaning news and politics pages on Facebook earned over 60.5 million interactions on more than 65,000 election-related posts in 2022. Now, further analysis has found that more than 10,000 of those posts, which earned nearly 10.4 millions interactions, also mentioned Trump, and many contained or amplified election misinformation, including from Trump and right-wing outlets.
Meta has long claimed that it removes and prevents the spread of misinformation on its platforms, but Media Matters and others have repeatedly reported that the company has continuously struggled to control the spread of false claims about election fraud. And now, Meta is reinstating Trump, despite his propensity to push election misinformation on his own social platform Truth Social.
Along with announcing Trump’s reinstatement, Meta promised that it would have “new guardrails in place to deter repeat offenses,” and Nick Clegg, Meta's president of global affairs, reiterated that the company would “take action to restrict the circulation” of violative posts. But it has been reported that Meta also clarified that “posts attacking 2020 will be allowed, but posts attacking 2024 are a different story” — a policy that ignores Trump’s posting patterns on Truth Social and is unlikely to prevent him from sharing election misinformation on the platform.
Meta’s failures with election misinformation in 2022 show that the company is unprepared for the barrage of misinformation that Trump will undoubtedly post on its platforms.
Half of the top 20 election-related posts from right-leaning pages amplified conspiracy theories
In 2022, right-leaning news and politics pages on Facebook earned over 60.5 million interactions on over 65,000 election-related posts. Out of the 20 election-related posts that earned the most interactions, half amplified election fraud conspiracy theories either directly or implicitly.
The top 3 election-related posts from right-leaning pages contained claims of election fraud, with the top post sharing a cartoon that claimed that Biden’s presidential election was “fixed overnight.” Two of the top 20 election-related posts had authoritative labels from Facebook’s third-party fact-checkers, with one (from Dan Bongino) marked as false information and another (from ForAmerica) marked as missing context.