Kenya To Commence Its First Social Media Election.
Nairobi, Kenya -
Kenyans are heading to the polls on Tuesday to elect a president. Voters will
also choose governors, members of parliament and senators. But Tuesday's
election is different. It is the election in which social media came of age. It
is the one where fake news made an entrance and became mainstream.
Western
PR firms have been hired to polish up the images of candidates and tarnish that
of competitors. Attack ads have become common.
A
record amount of money has been spent to convince millions of registered
voters.
Taxpayers
are footing most of it - a $480m bill to execute the poll, according to Kenya's
national treasury.
The
successful presidential candidate will spend at least $50m to get to the state
house, according to Johnson Sakaja, the former chairman of the party that put
President Uhuru Kenyatta in power in 2013.
The
financial strain of the most expensive election in the country's history will
be felt long after the August 8 election.
The
two main candidates - President Kenyatta and opposition leader Raila Odinga -
are going the extra mile to come out on top. Their main target: the youth -
those between 18 and 35 - who make up more than half of the 19.6 million
registered voters.
To
make sure the young voters cast their ballot for them, candidates have set up
digital teams and are working round the clock posting photos, videos and giving
live commentary from campaign rallies.
Facebook, Twitter and Instagram are
the new ways to reach these internet-savvy young voters.
Dozens of
slick campaign videos have been uploaded on Facebook in the past couple of
weeks. When not sharing videos and photos on the social network the hopefuls
are doing Facebook Lives to answer questions from voters who did not attend
their rallies.
Nothing
has been left to chance.
News
conferences are having to compete with 140 characters posted on verified
Twitter accounts of candidates.
Opponents
have even traded virtual blows courtesy of social media.
Fake
news of opinion polls claiming to be from the new channels BBC and CNN have
been posted and widely shared on social media in an attempt to scare voters
from opponents. Fake news sites have also popped up online.
The
election in Kenya has changed drastically. And those candidates who do not
adapt might find themselves out of office.
With
polls suggesting a close election, social media and the spread of alarmist fake
news might be what makes the difference in this maturing democracy.
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