Tories censured for misleading information on Twitter five times more than Labour
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The Conservative Party is almost five times more likely to be censured on social media for sharing false or misleading information online than Labour, new research has claimed.
Top government accounts, including the prime minister, cabinet ministers and the official Conservative Twitter/X feed have accrued almost five times as many community notes as the opposition, a campaign group has said.
A fact-checking feature was made available on Twitter/X in the UK in January last year and allows users to add context or clarifications below posts that contain false or misleading information. Contributors can leave notes on any post and if enough contributors from different points of view rate that note as helpful, the note will be publicly shown.
Research commissioned by pro-European campaign group Best for Britain examined the number of community notes accrued by all members of the cabinet and shadow cabinet, as well as their official party accounts, on Twitter/X.
In total, 73 posts from government party accounts had community notes attached, compared to 15 from official opposition accounts.
The worst offender was the official Conservative Party account which was noted 26 times on posts, including allegedly manipulatedĀ videos,Ā false claimsĀ about the opposition leader and misleading statementsĀ about the economy.
One post that said the economy was āoutperforming expectationsā had a community note attached which said āUK GDP fell last quarter, compared to an estimate of zero per cent, so it is not outperforming any expectations.ā
Another post claimed that Sir Keir Starmer ācalled for the monarchy to be abolishedā in 2021, but the community note pointed out that Sir Keir said in 2005 that he āused to propose the abolition of the monarchyā.
A close second was the prime minister himself who ā despite promising āintegrity, professionalism and accountability at every levelā ā was pulled up by social media users 25 times in just over a year.
Rishi Sunakās posts were flagged nine times since the start of 2024 and five in the first week of January alone, where he claimed that the government had cleared the asylum backlog, took creditĀ for falls in inflation and claimed the government had cut taxes.
Most recently, Mr Sunak said the spring budget would bring ālower taxesā, while the community note pointed out that the accompanying OBR forecast said that taxes are actually increasing to 37.1 per cent of GDP by 2028/29, four percentage points higher than they were before the pandemic.
By contrast, Sir Keirās account has received four community notes in the same period, the majority of which related to last yearās local elections, and the official Labour Party account received seven.
Most recently, the Labour leader said it was ā36 years since the first Black MPs were electedā, while the attached note pointed out that James Townsend was a Black MP, first elected in 1772.
The chancellor Jeremy Hunt, home secretary James Cleverly, defence secretary Grant Shapps and leader of the commons Penny Mordaunt also all received more community notes than their counterparts in the shadow cabinet.
The only shadow cabinet minister who received more community notes than their Conservative counterpart was David Lammy, receiving two to David Cameronās zero. Mr Cameron has been in the Cabinet for four months.
The results come in the wake of a damning Edelman Trust Barometer report that showed the UK has the steepest decline in public trust globally. Trust in the government has fallen to 30 per cent ā a 15-point fall since 2021.
Campaigners say the governing partyās habit of sharing misleading information on social media is further undermining public trust in politics.
Naomi Smith, CEO of Best for Britain warned that the findings āshouldnāt be taken lightly, especially in an election year where lack of trust can feed dangerous populismā.
She added: āA government that the public canāt trust to act with integrity and transparency ā both essential for liberal democracy ā is a government that shouldnāt be in power. We need a general election and our polling shows that the public want it now.ā
Labour and the Conservatives have been approached for comment.
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