Digital Shadow Campaigns: The Evolving Face of Electoral Persuasion and Regulatory Gaps in 2025

Syllabus: Salient features of the Representation of People’s Act.

Context: 

  • India’s election framework regulates campaigns no longer dominated solely by parties and candidates.
  • Political persuasion has shifted towards digital platforms and intermediaries, challenging traditional oversight.
  • Election Commission advisories during Bihar Assembly elections highlighted this regulatory mismatch.

Existing Regulatory Framework

  • EC mandated pre-certification of political advertisements by Media Certification and Monitoring Committees (MCMC).
  • Section 77(1), Representation of the People Act, 1951, requires parties to disclose social media expenditure.
  • Regulatory focus remains limited to political parties and candidates.

Limited Regulatory Lens

  • Digital outreach increasingly driven by third-party actors like influencers, campaign firms, and interest groups.
  • EC’s October 21 notification included individuals and organisations but only for print media.
  • Restrictions applied merely to polling day and preceding day, ignoring longer digital campaign cycles.
  • Digital campaigns often peak weeks before polling, beyond regulatory timelines.

Who Pays and Who Influences

  • Digital campaigning now constitutes the largest share of election expenditure.
  • Meta Ads Library data shows 55 advertisers spent over ₹1 lakh in Bihar election period.
  • Only 23 advertisers were official parties or candidates.
  • 32 advertisers were third-party or surrogate actors, operating outside formal disclosure norms.

Reach, Demographics, and Efficiency

  • Third-party actors outspent parties and candidates while achieving greater visibility.
  • With similar average spending, third-party campaigns generated nearly double impressions.
  • Youth aged 13–34 years consumed over 74% of digital political content.
  • Party advertisements concentrated among 13–34 age groups, while third-party content reached older demographics.
  • Third-party advertisers showed higher efficiency, generating 2.60 crore impressions per ₹10 lakh spent.
  • Official party pages generated only 1.54 crore impressions per ₹10 lakh spent.

Opaque Financial Linkages

  • Some official party advertisements were financed by external entities.
  • Example: Advertisements on Janata Dal (United)’s page were funded by “The Spectrum”.
  • Such spending may not appear in official expenditure statements, understating true campaign costs.
  • Influence appears bi-directional, with third parties financing official messaging.

Accountability and Legal Gaps

  • Supreme Court (Gemini TV case, 2004) barred third-party political advertising benefiting candidates.
  • EC guidelines failed to extend this principle to digital third-party actors.
  • Many continued campaigning even on polling day, beyond effective scrutiny.

Delayed and Inadequate Regulation

  • Campaign finance disclosures list spending under platform names, obscuring real funders.
  • Parties disclose what they spend, not what others spend on their behalf.
  • Digital influence accumulates over months, making last-minute restrictions ineffective.
  • Absence of updated regulation risks erosion of trust in digital electoral fairness.

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