Musk: Twitter May Have Been Biased in Brazil Elections
In response to a tweet about how previous Twitter management handled elections, Elon Musk on Saturday alluded to the possible preferential treatment given to left-wing candidate Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in this year’s presidential runoff election in Brazil.
Facts
- In response to a tweet about how previous Twitter management handled elections, Elon Musk on Saturday alluded to the possible preferential treatment given to left-wing candidate Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva in this year’s presidential runoff election in Brazil.
- Musk tweeted: "I've seen a lot of concerning tweets about the recent Brazil election. If those tweets are accurate, it's possible that Twitter personnel gave preference to left wing candidates."
- The victorious Lula got 50.9% of the vote compared to 49.1% for incumbent Pres. Jair Bolsonaro. Although he initially conceded, Bolsonaro later claimed an audit showed around 280k voting machines had malfunctioned, costing him the win.
- Musk and Bolsonaro have developed a relationship during the latter’s presidency. Musk visited Brazil this year to propose potential investments to help the country’s deforestation monitoring and provide broadband internet to remote regions.
- Gleisi Hoffman, president of Lula’s party, has ridiculed Bolsonaro’s claims of fraud and called for "peace" so Brazil can build a "better future."
- Musk’s Brazil revelation came one day after he allowed a journalist to shed some light on the platform’s role in suppressing the Hunter Biden laptop story, and how it may have affected the 2020 US presidential election.
Sources: Reuters, New York Post, FOX News, and Yahoo News.
Narratives
- Right narrative, as provided by Daily Mail. The woke Twitter staff before Musk's takeover clearly couldn’t stop itself from tipping elections toward leftist candidates, whether it was Lula in Brazil or Joe Biden in the US. It was pretty obvious even before Musk’s tweet that Twitter was biased considering all the Bolsonaro allies who had their accounts suspended.
- Left narrative, as provided by Jacobin. There was no evidence of fraud in Brazil's election, but Bolsonaro supporters who don’t believe it was legitimate have responded to the results with violence. Claiming Twitter might’ve done something to impact the election only fuels the election deniers who need to be calmed, not stoked. As his reign comes closer to its end, it wouldn't be surprising to see the far-right leader take any measures necessary to retain his power.