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Twitter has been fined $100,000 by Washington state for campaign finance violations, the state’s attorney general said on Tuesday.
According to the judgement filed in King County Superior Court (pdf), Twitter unlawfully failed to keep records of some $194,550 worth of political ads from 2012 through 2019. The ads were paid for by at least 38 Washington candidates and committees.
“Twitter unlawfully failed to maintain for public inspection records about Washington political ads that ran on its platform from 2012 until Nov. 22, 2019. On that date, Twitter implemented a ban on all political advertising,” read the announcement from Attorney General Bob Ferguson’s office.
The state’s campaign finance disclosure law, adopted in 1972, requires that political advertisers retain records to the political ads so that they are available for public inspection.
“Transparency in political advertising is critical to a free and informed electorate,” Ferguson said. “Whether you are a local newspaper or a multinational social media platform, you must follow our campaign finance laws.”
A Twitter spokesperson said in a statement to to media outlets, “We ended all political advertising in November 2019 in line with our belief that the reach of political speech should be earned and not bought. This resolution is reflective of our commitment to transparency and accountability.”
According to Ferguson’s announcement, the state’s Public Disclosure Commission (PDC) received a notice on Oct. 30, 2019 from an independent researcher about the social media giant’s potential violations. The researcher is identified as Tallman Trask in the court filing. Trask is a University of Washington law student and political activist, according to The Seattle Times.
Trask had in October 2019 begun requesting records for payments of political advertisements from 12 specific campaigns but he did not receive what he requested for 2 months.
The court judgement noted that when Trask notified the PDC of the potential violation on Oct. 30, Twitter on the same day announced it would discontinue all paid political advertising on its platform.
The PDC on June 15 referred the case to Ferguson on suspicion that Twitter may have violated the state’s campaign finance law.
Twitter’s new political advertising policy was finalized 4 weeks, and effective 5 weeks after Trask had requested on Oct. 15 more records than his initial request from Twitter related to political advertising—information on all political advertising on Twitter purchased since Oct. 14, 2014.
Trask told The Seattle Times that the fine for Twitter is “particularly good news for fairness in election advertising in our state.”
“It’s a question of whether or not companies are following the laws that the people want in place, and that other companies have followed for decades. It’s more about ensuring fairness than ensuring fines,” he told the outlet.
Washington’s campaign finance law requires commercial advertisers to indefinitely retain certain records such as names of candidates, the dates of the advertisements, the sponsors of the ads, how much the ads cost, and who paid for them. The information must be publicly available within 24 hours of the ad’s publication.
Ferguson has pursued cases against other social media platforms. Google and Facebook were each fined more than $200,000 in December 2018 for having failed to keep legally required records for political advertising since 2013.
The Washington state attorney general in April 2020 sued Facebook for a second time for having sold political ads without retaining records for public inspection. Ferguson alleges Facebook intentionally violated the law and, if found to be the case, the campaign finance penalties can be tripled. Facebook sought to have the charges dismissed but the court rejected the effort in August. The case is ongoing.
The company on Oct. 7 announced that it will temporarily ban political ads in the United States after the Nov. 3 election when polls close, “to reduce opportunities for confusion or abuse.” It said it will let advertisers know when the policy is lifted.
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