Watchdog group 'Campaign for Accountability' Calls for Investigation of Big Tech Imbeds in Political Campaigns
Watchdog group Campaign for Accountability is calling for an investigation into political campaigns' use of "imbedded" Facebook and Google staffers. It wants the House and Senate Rules Committees to investigate the practice and whether new laws are needed to prevent what it says are edge providers "abusing their relationships" with Washington.
The campaign, which runs the Google Transparency Project, also released a report outlining what it says is the quid pro quo for such imbeds: "Campaigns get free help targeting and persuading voters; the companies reap valuable intelligence for their lobbying operations and forge relationships with politicians who will be responsible for laws affecting their interests." The campaign argues that the imbeds gives the edge providers inside knowledge of the campaigns and muscle with policymakers and potential policymakers that other industries can't get, calling it an "undisclosed, and largely unregulated influence channel." "Academics who interviewed the tech company embeds shortly after the election found they made no bones about the purpose of the embeds. '[S]taffers at these firms stated that providing tools to candidates to help them get elected was a way to build relationships with the elected representatives who would be in a position to regulate them in the future," the report said.
Watchdog group 'Campaign for Accountability' Calls for Investigation of Big Tech Imbeds in Political Campaigns Google in Government: Explore the Data (Campaign for Accountability)