Chasing youth vote, Indian parties blitz
smartphones with political cartoons
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[March 20, 2019]
By Rajendra Jadhav and Sankalp Phartiyal
PUNE, India (Reuters) - Ganesh Bhalerao is
a cartoonist hoping to go viral in the battle to secure Prime Minister
Narendra Modi's re-election when India votes over the next two months.
Hired by the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to find amusing ways to
lionize Modi or lampoon opposition leader Rahul Gandhi, Bhalerao is a
social media warrior in an election campaign being fought online as
never before.
"Political parties are realizing the importance of cartoons as they
elicit a huge response," the 29-year-old former art teacher told Reuters
while feverishly sketching a piece glorifying the Modi government for
ordering India's recent air strikes against Pakistan.
Cartoons posted on BJP-run Facebook pages, Twitter handles and WhatsApp
groups are shared hundreds of times and reach millions, Bhalerao told
Reuters as he worked in his apartment in the western city of Pune.
"A cartoon conveys the message of a 500-1,000 word article in just a
minute," he said.
The scale of elections in India means voting is staggered, with the
first regions going to vote on April 11, and the count to be completed
on May 23.
Each day Bhalerao reads the local newspapers, watches the television
news, and checks his WhatsApp messages, seeking ideas for an image or
issue that might resonate with supporters of the Hindu nationalist BJP.
Being a Modi supporter himself makes it easier.
Like the BJP, Gandhi's Congress Party and other rivals have their own
armies of artists, video editors and journalists to create online
content for the social media war.
Hired for the campaign season, they get paid a few hundred dollars a
month, according to half a dozen party workers who spoke with Reuters.
Social media has made it a lot easier for political parties to get out
their message to more voters. But nowadays, India's masses want politics
served with more pizzazz.
Nearly two-thirds of the population is under 35 years old. Most have
little time or patience for attending political rallies, or wading
through turgid party manifestoes.
"The larger audience is now more inclined to short videos, cartoons and
visuals," Dimptangshu Chowdhury told Reuters in Kolkata, where he heads
the IT wing of Trinamool Congress, a powerful regional party in West
Bengal.
LIMITED OVERSIGHT
India is by far the world's biggest democracy, but most of its 1.3
billion population belong to lower income groups. And, at a time when
more mature democracies than India's are grappling with the impact of
social media, there are concerns about the electorate's susceptibility
to false messages spread online.
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Ganesh Bhalerao, a cartoonist hired by the ruling Bharatiya Janata
Party, draws a political cartoon inside his home in Pune, India,
February 28, 2019. REUTERS/Rajendra Jadhav
As more than two-thirds of Indians live in rural areas, political
parties are trying to extend their social media reach through
regional languages, to go beyond urban areas where Hindi and English
are more commonly spoken.
When Modi's BJP won a landslide victory in 2014, social media had
not become as pervasive as it is today. Data plans were expensive
and pricey smartphones were unaffordable for far more people.
Now there are more than 400 million smartphones users and consumers
are able to access nearly 50 gigabytes of data for as little as $3
per month.
It all helps explain why social media platforms like Facebook, its
messenger WhatsApp and micro-blogging site Twitter have become such
fierce political battlegrounds.
In 2014, parties spent less than half a million dollars on digital
advertising, but this time round it is likely to be closer to $26
million, according to a top media and marketing firm, which did not
want to be named.
India's Election Commission has asked candidates to report their
spending on social media and it also requires them to seek approval
for advertisements, but such rules can be bypassed by the use of
proxies.
A code of conduct, which prohibits political campaigning 48 hours
before voting in any area, will apply for online campaigns too, the
commission said earlier this month.
But the new rule is unlikely to stop thousands of party workers from
spreading messages on social media platforms.
Putting a cut-off on campaigning doesn't have any effect anymore, as
the Commission is unable to control what is posted online, according
to Nikhil Pahwa, digital rights activist and editor of MediaNama, a
Delhi-based publication.
"It just doesn't know how to deal with the idea of content being
available online in perpetuity," Pahwa said.
(Additional reporting by Subrata Nag Choudhury in Kolkata and
Jatindra Dash in Bhubaneswar; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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