The Prague Post - Prime-time lies: Brazil candidates take information wars to TV

EUR -
AED 4.193023
AFN 73.070761
ALL 93.836986
AMD 419.553388
ANG 2.044166
AOA 1047.553452
ARS 1703.235444
AUD 1.645282
AWG 2.057977
AZN 1.942409
BAM 1.955843
BBD 2.30002
BDT 140.751849
BGN 1.930537
BHD 0.430506
BIF 3400.244679
BMD 1.141735
BND 1.477313
BOB 7.920208
BRL 5.918873
BSD 1.14201
BTN 108.877431
BWP 15.427149
BYN 3.307829
BYR 22378.006044
BZD 2.29674
CAD 1.624027
CDF 2564.337173
CHF 0.920906
CLF 0.026839
CLP 1056.413495
CNY 7.751357
CNH 7.760544
COP 3835.373306
CRC 520.309115
CUC 1.141735
CUP 30.255978
CVE 110.265966
CZK 24.16014
DJF 203.365344
DKK 7.474699
DOP 67.550888
DZD 152.111112
EGP 55.715186
ERN 17.126025
ETB 184.322029
FJD 2.557771
FKP 0.855104
GBP 0.854709
GEL 3.008429
GGP 0.855104
GHS 13.013342
GIP 0.855104
GMD 82.775015
GNF 10016.21934
GTQ 8.714153
GYD 238.886277
HKD 8.954398
HNL 30.566402
HRK 7.536019
HTG 149.231307
HUF 353.887043
IDR 20571.552923
ILS 3.422352
IMP 0.855104
INR 108.906734
IQD 1496.019657
IRR 1570970.276379
ISK 143.985723
JEP 0.855104
JMD 180.613955
JOD 0.80951
JPY 185.319001
KES 147.56903
KGS 99.844873
KHR 4582.120408
KMF 492.087245
KPW 1027.561902
KRW 1749.497652
KWD 0.3542
KYD 0.951771
KZT 539.797093
LAK 25751.451144
LBP 102264.491588
LKR 382.505026
LRD 207.285432
LSL 18.529225
LTL 3.371247
LVL 0.690624
LYD 7.327064
MAD 10.692034
MDL 20.134499
MGA 4850.084969
MKD 61.662553
MMK 2397.363381
MNT 4090.11448
MOP 9.226587
MRU 45.578998
MUR 53.741559
MVR 17.651145
MWK 1979.852026
MXN 19.924435
MYR 4.664107
MZN 72.968152
NAD 18.529143
NGN 1564.064067
NIO 42.020552
NOK 11.228222
NPR 174.206578
NZD 2.008169
OMR 0.438995
PAB 1.14202
PEN 3.888651
PGK 5.018044
PHP 70.109952
PKR 317.498272
PLN 4.29092
PYG 6927.151694
QAR 4.174891
RON 5.229372
RSD 117.345258
RUB 87.772375
RWF 1673.624601
SAR 4.291168
SBD 9.200718
SCR 15.961161
SDG 685.610097
SEK 11.027602
SGD 1.476686
SHP 0.85242
SLE 27.800654
SLL 23941.616313
SOS 652.64859
SRD 43.035461
STD 23631.609392
STN 24.500429
SVC 9.992088
SYP 126.198365
SZL 18.525243
THB 38.051797
TJS 10.563478
TMT 4.00749
TND 3.378274
TOP 2.749024
TRY 53.458774
TTD 7.733135
TWD 36.578453
TZS 2997.057801
UAH 50.921946
UGX 4172.036549
USD 1.141735
UYU 45.941006
UZS 13755.30122
VES 729.458226
VND 30027.630559
VUV 135.859591
WST 3.166244
XAF 655.974238
XAG 0.018449
XAU 0.000275
XCD 3.085596
XCG 2.058127
XDR 0.814309
XOF 655.962747
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.648461
ZAR 18.545065
ZMK 10276.984151
ZMW 21.041369
ZWL 367.638205
  • RBGPF

    -4.1100

    61.5

    -6.68%

  • BCE

    -0.1250

    21.295

    -0.59%

  • NGG

    -0.3700

    82.48

    -0.45%

  • RIO

    -0.5700

    93.85

    -0.61%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    22.25

    +0.45%

  • RYCEF

    0.3400

    20.09

    +1.69%

  • JRI

    0.0800

    13.08

    +0.61%

  • AZN

    -6.7000

    188.45

    -3.56%

  • BCC

    -1.6700

    74.26

    -2.25%

  • VOD

    -0.0650

    13.085

    -0.5%

  • BP

    -0.0700

    37.33

    -0.19%

  • BTI

    -0.5100

    61.26

    -0.83%

  • RELX

    0.1850

    32.115

    +0.58%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.04

    +0.23%

  • GSK

    -0.7550

    52.905

    -1.43%

Prime-time lies: Brazil candidates take information wars to TV
Prime-time lies: Brazil candidates take information wars to TV / Photo: CARL DE SOUZA - AFP

Prime-time lies: Brazil candidates take information wars to TV

Disinformation on social networks has become routine as Brazil heads for deeply divisive elections, but it can gain traction and a broader audience when it comes straight from the candidates' mouths on national television.

Text size:

The official start last month of the campaign for the October 2 elections means candidates have huge exposure on TV, including prime-time interviews, debates and daily ad spots paid for with public funds.

In practice, that has meant a flood of false narratives being beamed into Brazilian living rooms, whether it is incumbent President Jair Bolsonaro taking credit for the idea to create a mega-popular instant payments system known as "Pix" or front-runner Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva claiming he was absolved of all corruption charges against him, to cite just two examples.

In reality, Brazil's central bank started working on Pix in 2018, a year before the far-right incumbent took office. And Lula, the charismatic but tarnished leftist who led Brazil from 2003 to 2010, had his controversial convictions stemming from the "Car Wash" corruption scandal overturned on procedural grounds. He was not absolved.

"Campaigns are above all a war of narratives," and candidates often use distorted or outright false statements to sell themselves, says Amaro Grassi, a public policy expert at the Getulio Vargas Foundation.

There is nothing new about lies in politics.

But analysts warn TV is now giving broader reach to the disinformation that has been raging for months on social networks in Brazil.

"Television is still a mass medium" in Brazil, says Arthur Ituassu, associate professor of political communication at Pontifical Catholic University in Rio de Janeiro.

Unlike social media, Brazilian television -- where the vast majority of audience share is still concentrated among a handful of top networks, notably the dominant TV Globo -- reaches a broad population that is "not segmented by nature," he says.

- 'If it's on TV, it's true' -

"Television is still a space that reaches the general public, going well beyond the audience that is already firmly in one camp or the other," says Helena Martins, a communications professor at the Federal University of Ceara.

There is also a widely held belief that "if it's on TV, it's true," she adds.

The 2018 race that brought Bolsonaro to power was already awash in disinformation, especially on social media -- hugely powerful in a country that has more smart phones than people (an estimated 242 million, for 213 million inhabitants).

If anything, the campaign is arguably uglier this time around, given that the presidential race is highly polarized between the far-right incumbent and his leftist nemesis.

Amid those deep divisions, 85 percent of Brazilians say disinformation could influence the outcome of the election, according to a poll from the Ipec institute published on September 6.

At the same time, however, polls show there are relatively few voters left to persuade: 78 percent of voters say their minds are "completely" made up, found a poll from the Datafolha institute published last week.

The same poll found Lula had 45 percent of the vote, to 33 percent for Bolsonaro -- broadly in line with the institute's previous poll.

No other candidate was in double digits.

"There's a very high level of consolidation of voter intentions. That makes it difficult for any narrative to change the picture at this point," says Grassi.

That has not stopped the candidates from seeking to rile up their bases with truth-bending statements, hoping to persuade the odd undecided or third-candidate voter in the process.

Lula, for example, has repeatedly exaggerated his accomplishments on the economy.

Bolsonaro has meanwhile accused Lula of being anti-Evangelical and anti-agribusiness, two powerful groups that lean toward the incumbent.

"The idea is to reinforce those groups' rejection of Lula," says Grassi.

"Because in an election as polarized as this, it ends up being largely a battle of rejection."

N.Simek--TPP