Kate Starbird says attacks have made research difficult, and claims of bias arise because of prevalence of lies from the right

A key researcher in the fight against election misinformation – who herself became the subject of an intensive misinformation campaign – has said her field gets accused of “bias” precisely because it’s now mainly rightwingers who spread the worst lies.

Kate Starbird, co-founder of the University of Washington’s Center for an Informed Public, added that she feared that the entirely false story of rigged elections has now “sunk in” for many Americans on the right. “The idea that they’re already going to the polls with the belief that they’re being cheated means they’ll misinterpret everything they see through that lens,” she said.

Starbird’s group partnered with Stanford Internet Observatory on the Election Integrity Partnership ahead of the 2020 elections – a campaign during which a flood of misinformation swirled around the internet, with daily claims of unproven voter fraud.

Starbird and her team helped document that flood, and in return congressional Republicans and conservative attorneys attacked her research, alleging it amounted to censorship and violated the first amendment.

  • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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    10 months ago

    I doubt it was one person who started it.

    And I suspect it began long ago - US political coverage in the 1990s was full of talk of partisanship. For that to have taken effect, I’m guessing it must have started ten or twenty years before.^(but I don’t know what I’m talking about)

    • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      It started when the USSR fell. Without the threat of global communism on the horizon the US really let itself go.

      Now the empire can barely keep itself together and satellite states are breaking away to join the BRICS!