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Facebook rolls back ban on political ads for Georgia run-off election

Election will decide which political party takes control of Senate

Graeme Massie
Los Angeles
Tuesday 15 December 2020 17:44 EST
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Raphael Warnock pushes back on Georgia GOP's "smear ads"

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Facebook is lifting its temporary post-election ban on political ads ahead of the Georgia run-off election.

The social media giant announced the move after saying that the candidates themselves and other groups wanted to advertise on the site before voters go to the polls in January.

The election sees Senator Kelly Loeffler take on Raphael Warnock, and Senator David Perdue go up against challenger Jon Ossoff.

The election, which sees both races tightly contested, will decide which party takes control of the Senate.

“We agree that our ad tools are an important way for people to get information about these elections,” wrote Facebook’s Sarah Schiff in a blog post.

“So we have developed a process to allow advertisers to run ads with the purpose of reaching voters in Georgia about Georgia’s runoff elections.”

Republicans currently hold a 50-48 majority in the Senate.

If the two Democrat challengers win both of the Georgia elections, Vice President-elect Kamala Harris would cast the tie-breaking vote, giving the party full control of the White House and both chambers of Congress.

But if Republicans win one of the seats they will retain control of the Senate.

Facebook says it will prioritise advertisers with “direct involvement in these elections” and reject adverts targeting locations outside the state.

Before the general election the company announced it would stop running political adverts after the polls closed on 3 November amid fears of disinformation campaigns.

Before the reversal groups could not use the platform to raise money or promote the candidates in Georgia.

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