Current:Home > ScamsBrazilians are about to vote. And they're dealing with familiar viral election lies -ValueMetric
Brazilians are about to vote. And they're dealing with familiar viral election lies
View
Date:2025-04-13 10:17:09
As Brazilians head to the polls to pick their next leader, the shadows of the country's 2018 election as well as the 2020 U.S. presidential vote loom large.
Ahead of the first round of voting on Sunday, baseless accusations of electoral fraud are circulating on social media, and President Jair Bolsonaro is laying the groundwork to contest the results — echoing Donald Trump's claims of a stolen election. For many, it raises fears that Brazil is being engulfed by its own internet-fueled "big lie."
Brazil's last presidential contest in 2018 was so plagued by viral falsehoods, journalist Patricia Campos Mello called it "the WhatsApp election."
Campos Mello, a reporter for the newspaper Folha de Sao Paolo, has investigated how Brazilians were flooded with wildly untrue claims on the Meta-owned messaging app hugely popular in Brazil.
Back then, many of the false election narratives focused on hot-button cultural issues, like gender identity and teaching LGBT tolerance in schools, which Bolsonaro derided as handing out a "gay kit" to children. One notorious video that went viral in September 2018 falsely accused Bolsonaro's opponent of distributing baby bottles with penis-shaped nipples at day care centers.
"People actually believed it," Campos Mello said.
Bulk messages spread viral lies
The ability to forward encrypted messages thousands of times to big WhatsApp groups helped hoaxes like that one take off like wildfire. Marketing groups scraped phone numbers and sold campaigns the ability to send hundreds of thousands of WhatApp messages at a time, Campos Mello reported. A study in the weeks leading up to the 2018 vote found half of the most widely shared images in popular political groups on the app were false or misleading.
Bulk WhatsApp messaging "made it faster to reach people and to reach specific groups of voters," Campos Mello said.
Bolsonaro triumphed in 2018. But the experience shook many Brazilians, and over the next few years some things changed.
WhatsApp limited the size of groups and how widely users can forward messages, and it sued some marketing agencies selling bulk messaging services. Brazil's election authorities banned the use of mass messaging for political purposes and vowed to disqualify candidates who spread lies that way.
Today, many Brazilians say they're more skeptical of what they see online.
"I avoid social media as much as possible because of the fraudulent news popping up all the time," said André Benjamin, a civil servant in Rio de Janeiro, speaking in Portuguese.
But even as companies and institutions have raised their guard against electoral falsehoods, the nature of those false claims has also evolved since 2018.
Parallels to Trump
In 2022, "the main theme of disinformation campaigns is our version of 'the big lie,'" Campos Mello said.
The parallels to Trump's false claims that he won the 2020 U.S. election are not subtle.
Bolsonaro has baselessly alleged that Brazil's elections are rigged, that electronic voting machines can't be trusted, and that polls that show him trailing his rival, former President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, can't be believed.
Those claims are finding fertile ground online, with posts claiming electronic votes can't be verified and smearing polling agencies gaining traction, said Natália Leal, CEO of fact-checker Lupa.
"There is this lack of credibility and of confidence, and this could be a weapon for Bolsonaro supporters [and the] far right movement," she said.
On social media, Bolsonaro supporters reject polls and point instead to the size of the crowds at the president's rallies — another echo of Trump's rhetoric.
The attacks against polls have even spawned violence.
"There are actual cases of people working for pollsters being harassed [and] beaten," said Chico Marés, Lupa's head of journalism.
And while many social media companies have policies meant to safeguard elections, these messages are spreading across WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter, TikTok and YouTube, as well as Telegram.
The messaging app has gained popularity as WhatsApp curbed the ability to broadcast bulk messages, and Bolsonaro has urged his supporters to use it.
Brazil's supreme court briefly banned Telegram earlier this year for not removing some posts and accounts spreading falsehoods.
The app is now cooperating with a government program to combat misleading election claims, but researchers say it remains a hotbed of falsehoods.
A recent investigation by the newspaper Estadão found a quarter of messages in Bolsonaro-supporting Telegram groups mentioned election fraud — some directly referring to Trump.
"For this very radicalized part of the population, President Bolsonaro is ahead in the polls, way ahead in the polls, and if he does not win in the first round, that means there was fraud because the electronic voting machines don't work," said Campos Mello.
The question is, if Bolsonaro continues to follow Trump's playbook, are the tech platforms — and Brazil's institutions — prepared for the results?
Editor's note: Facebook and WhatsApp parent Meta pays NPR to license NPR content.
Valdemar Geo contributed to this report.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- NCAA hands former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh a 4-year show cause order for recruiting violations
- Toby Keith wrote 20 top songs in 20 years. Here’s a look at his biggest hits.
- The Daily Money: Easing FAFSA woes
- Andy Reid vs. Kyle Shanahan: Head coach rematch is fourth in Super Bowl history
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Tyla wins first Best African Music Performance award for Water at 2024 Grammys
- A man extradited from Scotland continues to claim he’s not the person charged in 2 Utah rape cases
- Teachers’ union-backed group suing to stop tax money for A’s stadium plan in Las Vegas
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- Opinion piece about Detroit suburb is ‘racist and Islamophobic,’ Democrats say
Ranking
- Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
- Washington gun shop and its former owner to pay $3 million for selling high-capacity ammo magazines
- A 73-year-old man died while skydiving with friends in Arizona. It's the 2nd deadly incident involving skydiving in Eloy in 3 weeks.
- Model Poonam Pandey fakes death, says stunt was done to raise awareness on cervical cancer
- Video shows dog chewing cellphone battery pack, igniting fire in Oklahoma home
- Ballots without barcodes pushed by Georgia GOP in election-law blitz aimed at Trump supporters
- Welcome to the week of peak Taylor Swift, from the Grammys to Tokyo shows to the Super Bowl
- Sam Reich on revamping the game show - and Dropout's success as a small streamer
Recommendation
US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
North Carolina court upholds life without parole for man who killed officers when a juvenile
Census Bureau pauses changing how it asks about disabilities following backlash
A reporter is suing a Kansas town and various officials over a police raid on her newspaper
Clay Aiken's son Parker, 15, makes his TV debut, looks like his father's twin
Pilot was likely distracted before crash that killed 8 off North Carolina’s coast, investigators say
North Carolina insurance commissioner says no to industry plan that could double rates at coast
A reporter is suing a Kansas town and various officials over a police raid on her newspaper