This is the first article in the League of Women Voters Minneapolis 2024 Democracy series.
As voters gather information on candidates running for office, they will be inundated with massive amounts of information from a variety of sources. Some information will be factual, while much will involve misinformation and disinformation. Misinformation is false or inaccurate information, while disinformation is false information deliberately intended to harm and mislead.
Minnesota Secretary of State Steve Simon calls disinformation “the conscious spread of knowingly false information,” which shouldn’t be confused with political “disagreement.” When weaponized, Simon says, it can incite violence and disruption, posing a threat to the integrity of elections, the backbone of a healthy Democracy. He’s referring not just to January 6 but to the ongoing targeting of election workers.
In 1949, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) created the Fairness Doctrine, which required radio and television broadcasters “to present fair and balanced coverage of controversial issues to their communities, including granting equal airtime to opposing candidates for public office.” This was an extension of the Radio Act of 1927, which mandated that licensees serve the public interest.
Over the years, challengers of the equal airtime requirement called it an infringement of their First Amendment right to freedom of speech. By 1987, the FCC agreed and repealed the Fairness Doctrine.
In 2010, Citizens United, the landmark Supreme Court ruling, allowed corporations and unions to make unlimited, unregulated political donations. Together, these changes contributed to a deluge of negative attack advertising, opening the doors for disinformation in American politics.
Today, nearly 100% of the public receives news online, much of it from social media and other completely unregulated sources of information.
The American Psychological Association (APA) warns that the massive reach of unregulated “news” (including cable TV, social media, the internet, and a vast array of partisan actors from both here and abroad), has resulted not only in distrust of the news media but by extension, other trusted institutions, such as government and scientific institutions.
This rampant disinformation has led to a decline in interpersonal trust, ultimately affecting our local communities and personal relationships. We retreat to our “bubbles,” reinforcing our beliefs, whether they are true or false. Simon points out that the amplifiers in language—calling people “vermin” and claiming that elections are “rigged, fixed, and stolen”—only exacerbate our sense of doubt and suspicion.
We can adopt proactive strategies to combat disinformation before it spreads. Early identification and debunking of false information, combined with credible fact-checking, greatly reduces its potential to be widely spread and normalized.
Promoting media literacy—the ability to access, analyze, and evaluate—is crucial to understanding when messages are influenced by corporate media and outside influencers. Media literacy also helps us to recognize when we’re being emotionally manipulated.
How do we keep up with the rise of Artificial Intelligence (AI) driven disinformation, including fake audio and “deepfake” videos? One proposed solution involves using AI to spread the truth before the lies take hold, therefore using AI as a tool to provide inoculation against deceptive content, a concept known as “pre-bunking.”
American think tank Brookings suggests we all must take responsibility for a positive, truthful, democratic path forward: “Government should promote news literacy and strong professional journalism. The news industry must provide high-quality journalism in order to build public trust and correct fake news and disinformation.
Technology companies should invest in tools that identify fake news, reduce financial incentives for those who profit from disinformation, and improve online accountability. Educational institutions should make informing people about news literacy a high priority. Finally, individuals should follow diverse news sources and be skeptical of what they read and watch.” (Brookings, How to combat fake news and disinformation)
In the short term, Secretary Simon says there are three things we can take responsibility for to protect our elections: 1) Tell the truth, 2) Use empathy when dealing with people who are duped into believing the untruths, 3) Be transparent in showing how the system really works—“show don’t tell.”
If voters are to find the information they need to make important decisions about who to vote for, they will need tools to identify the disinformation they encounter and ultimately feel confident in their choices.
To take action, click this link for an informative article from aarp.org.
Next month, the second article in our League of Women Voters Minneapolis 2024 Democracy Series will go deeper into our discussion of election security. For accurate information on voting, go to the Minnesota Secretary of State site mnvotes.gov.
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