Facebook to halt political ads after US election

Getty Images Stickers sit on a table at the Wicker Park Social Center polling place during the first day of early voting in Indiana on October 06, 2020 in Highland, Indiana.Getty Images
Early voting is already under way ahead of the 3 November polling day

Facebook has said it will stop running all political and social-issue adverts after polls close in the US presidential election on 3 November.

It said the temporary measure would "reduce opportunities for confusion or abuse" ahead of results.

Facebook has already banned ads that prematurely declare victory in the election.

But one digital-rights campaign group said the change "isn't going to fix the problem at all".

Conspiracy theory

Fight For The Future said misinformation was often spread through Facebook Groups, which are promoted by the social-network's algorithms.

On Tuesday, Facebook announced it would remove any Pages, Groups or Instagram accounts representing a conspiracy theory known as QAnon.

But the social network has been criticised for deciding not to fact-check posts by politicians.

In a blog post, it said it would label politicians' posts, if a candidate or party "declares premature victory before a race is called by major media outlets".

Facebook Facebook notification explaining that votes are still being countedFacebook
Facebook will display a notification to show no result has been declared

It will also display notifications directing users to its own voting-information page.

Democrat senator Elizabeth Warren, who is often critical of Facebook, said the social network had made "performative changes".

"The problem isn't the ads themselves," she said.

"The problem is Facebook's refusal to regulate its ads, change its broken algorithm, or take responsibility for the power it's amassed."

Rival social networks, including TikTok and Twitter, do not allow paid political ads.

Facebook's policy changes

Presentational grey line
Analysis box by Joe Tidy, Cyber reporter

On 3 September, Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg wrote a lengthy blog post about what he and his teams were doing to "protect our democracy".

This latest announcement shows he feels those steps may not have been enough.

Facebook is responding to concerns groups may try to delegitimise the election result in the the hours and days after polls close.

But how much of a problem was paid-for advertising really going to be at that stage in the election?

Would a campaign hold back election funds to spend big on adverts to deliberately delegitimise the outcome of the vote?

You couldn't bet against it in this election - but it seems unlikely.

The real challenge will be for Facebook to stop the spread of misinformation via organic content such as Group or Page posts.

Those posts are routinely far more widely shared, more engaged with and potentially more dangerous than political ads.