This year, GOP election deniers got a free pass from Twitter and Facebook
Mark Finchem, the Republican candidate seeking to oversee Arizona's election system as that state's secretary of state, made a last-minute fundraising pitch on Wednesday using one of his favorite talking points: the looming threat of voter fraud.
Finchem falsely argued on Facebook and Twitter that his Democratic opponent, Adrian Fontes, is a member of the Chinese Communist Party and a "Cartel criminal" who has "rigged elections before."
It wasn't the first time Finchem spread unfounded election-rigging conspiracy theories on social media. In September, Finchem misleadingly posted that Fontes was being "bankrolled" by billionaire George Soros and former New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg and they want to "RIG our elections & our voter rolls."
For years, Facebook and Twitter have pledged to fight falsehoods that could confuse users about America's electoral system by tagging questionable posts with accurate information about voting and removing rule-breaking misinformation. But this electoral cycle, at least 26 candidates have posted inaccurate election claims since April, but the platforms have done virtually nothing to refute them, according to a Washington Post review of the companies' misinformation labeling practices.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/gop-election-deniers-got-free-131648252.html