-
Rob Reiner murder: son not medically cleared for court
-
FIFA announces $60 World Cup tickets for 'loyal fans'
-
Dembele and Bonmati scoop FIFA Best awards
-
Shiffrin dominates first run in Courchevel slalom
-
EU weakens 2035 combustion-engine ban to boost car industry
-
Arctic sees unprecedented heat as climate impacts cascade
-
French lawmakers adopt social security budget, suspend pension reform
-
Afrikaners mark pilgrimage day, resonating with their US backers
-
Lawmakers grill Trump officials on US alleged drug boat strikes
-
Hamraoui loses case against PSG over lack of support after attack
-
Trump - a year of ruling by executive order
-
Iran refusing to allow independent medical examination of Nobel winner: family
-
Brazil megacity Sao Paulo struck by fresh water crisis
-
Australia's Green becomes most expensive overseas buy in IPL history
-
VW stops production at German site for first time
-
Man City star Doku sidelined until new year
-
Rome's new Colosseum station reveals ancient treasures
-
EU eases 2035 combustion-engine ban to boost car industry
-
'Immense' collection of dinosaur footprints found in Italy
-
US unemployment rises further, hovering at highest since 2021
-
Senators grill Trump officials on US alleged drug boat strikes
-
Filmmaker Rob Reiner's son to be formally charged with parents' murder
-
Shift in battle to tackle teens trapped in Marseille drug 'slavery'
-
Stocks retreat on US jobs, oil drops on Ukraine hopes
-
Manchester United 'wanted me to leave', claims Fernandes
-
Serbian President blames 'witch hunt' for ditched Kushner hotel plan
-
Man who hit Liverpool parade jailed for over 21 years
-
Sahel juntas would have welcomed a coup in Benin: analysts
-
PSG ordered to pay around 60mn euros to Mbappe in wage dispute
-
BBC says will fight Trump's $10 bn defamation lawsuit
-
Stocks retreat ahead of US jobs, oil drops on Ukraine hopes
-
Suicide bomber kills five soldiers in northeast Nigeria: sources
-
EU set to drop 2035 combustion-engine ban to boost car industry
-
Australia's Green sold for record 252 mn rupees in IPL auction
-
Elusive December sun leaves Stockholm in the dark
-
Brendan Rodgers joins Saudi club Al Qadsiah
-
Thailand says Cambodia must announce ceasefire 'first' to stop fighting
-
M23 militia says to pull out of key DR Congo city at US's request
-
Thousands of glaciers to melt each year by mid-century: study
-
China to impose anti-dumping duties on EU pork for five years
-
Nepal starts tiger census to track recovery
-
Economic losses from natural disasters down by a third in 2025: Swiss Re
-
Indonesians reeling from flood devastation plea for global help
-
Timeline: How the Bondi Beach mass shooting unfolded
-
On the campaign trail in a tug-of-war Myanmar town
-
Bondi Beach suspect visited Philippines on Indian passport
-
Kenyan girls still afflicted by genital mutilation years after ban
-
Djokovic to warm up for Australian Open in Adelaide
-
Man bailed for fire protest on track at Hong Kong's richest horse race
-
Men's ATP tennis to apply extreme heat rule from 2026
| RBGPF | 4.1% | 81 | $ | |
| CMSC | -0.06% | 23.286 | $ | |
| RYCEF | -0.68% | 14.8 | $ | |
| GSK | -0.96% | 48.77 | $ | |
| RIO | 0.51% | 76.205 | $ | |
| BTI | -0.6% | 57.395 | $ | |
| NGG | -0.44% | 75.7 | $ | |
| SCS | 0.12% | 16.14 | $ | |
| VOD | 0.04% | 12.705 | $ | |
| RELX | -0.61% | 40.83 | $ | |
| BP | -4.34% | 33.785 | $ | |
| CMSD | -0.09% | 23.345 | $ | |
| AZN | -0.55% | 91.06 | $ | |
| BCC | 0.89% | 76.005 | $ | |
| JRI | -0.44% | 13.5 | $ | |
| BCE | -0.62% | 23.465 | $ |
In Brazil, Lula fights to boost social media presence
At a bar in Brasilia, two longtime members of Brazil's Workers Party retweet messages supporting Luis Inacio Lula da Silva on their cell phones, as part of his campaign's drive to fight the overwhelming presence of President Jair Bolsonaro on social media.
"We will not stop. Our battle, too, is online," said Ze Augusto, a retired professor, looking at his screen.
With a little more than four months to go until Brazil's presidential election, Lula, 76, has a comfortable but declining cushion in the polls.
But on social media he is far behind in popularity to the far-right president, who will probably be his opponent in a run-off on October 30.
When Bolsonaro came to power in 2018, a key tool in his victory was an adept social media campaign run by his son Carlos. It was based on propaganda, disinformation and the political destruction of opponents.
Since then, Bolsonaro has remained strong on social media, boasting a total of 47.5 million followers on Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, Instagram, Telegram and TikTok. That is triple what Lula has.
Lula, who served as president from 2003 to 2010, does not use a cell phone and has taken part in five election campaigns in which social media did not yet exist. His aides decided months ago to go on the counterattack online.
It raised the number of messages the campaign sent and the interactions on its accounts. It also created profiles on new social media like TikTok and won support from famous people in Brazil like the singer Daniela Mercury and a social media influencer named Felipe Neto.
It also launched something called Lulaverso, a campaign website designed for young people, where users can join pro-Lula groups on major social media and share stickers and GIFs of the leftist icon dancing or wearing sunglasses.
- 'Long ways to go'-
The social media campaign "improved but still has a long ways to go," Workers Party president Gleisi Hoffmann told the news website G1 two weeks ago.
After Lula officially declared his candidacy this month, the party overhauled the campaign and named as its communications chiefs former lawmaker Rui Falcao and Edinho Silva, who was a government minister under president Dilma Rousseff (2011-2016).
"We are going to create a giant chain of activists and sympathizers and increase our communications means more and more so we can defeat Bolsonaro on every front," Falcao told AFP.
Lula's campaign is doing well in tradtional media outlets. But Bolsonaro's outreach from his ecosystem of pages and groups on digital platforms goes further because it targets everyday people rather than party members, said Pablo Ortellado, a professor of public policy and management at the University of São Paulo.
The Lula campaign's communication "is endogenous. It strengthen's people's conviction. But it does not manage to punch through the walls of its groups, which have a very defined ideology and political identity," Ortellado said.
- Avoid fake news -
Bolsonaro and Lula have very different ideas about freedom of expression.
Bolsonaro advocates easing rules governing social media platforms, several of which have erased some of his content on grounds that it spread fake news.
Lula backs regulating social media but has never really gone into detail on how he would do this. And his party works against generating or forwarding false news, via a campaign of "stickers" that warn against and label falsehoods from Bolsonaro supporters.
Brazilian electoral authorities have taken measures to prevent the campaign, which officially begins in August, from becoming another disinformation war, as happened in 2018, in particular on WhatsApp.
"We want to win the election with the truth," said Ze Augusto.
B.Torres--AT