Political advertisers in the United States spent more than $619 million on the two largest digital ad platforms between the beginning of 2023 and the end of August of this year, according to a first-of-its-kind analysis jointly conducted by the Brennan Center, OpenSecrets, and the Wesleyan Media Project. Using publicly available data from Google and Meta (owner of Facebook and Instagram) and a transparent methodology, our analysis sheds light on the scope of online spending this election cycle on the two largest online platforms.
As the internet’s importance in American life has risen, much of our political activity has moved online. So too have efforts by hostile foreign governments and other bad actors sowing political disinformation to exploit divisions in the U.S. electorate. Examples of this type of interference include the Russian government’s $10 million Tenet Media scheme to build a network of right-wing influencers on YouTube and other media, as well as its similar effort earlier this summer to influence European elections through covertly sponsored Facebook advertisements.
Despite the importance of online spending in elections, existing transparency rules are extremely weak. As a result, the public data are limited and inconsistent, making it difficult to identify many advertisers and impossible to know the sources of much of the spending. In part because of the difficulty of analyzing and combining the available data, we have focused on Google and Meta. Although they are the largest digital ad platforms in the United States, this means that the numbers reported here represent only a portion of the total universe of online political spending.