The underside of the infox, the chronicle

French presidential: the integrity of the election targeted by fake news

Audio 03:34

Many Internet users claim, wrongly, that the presidential election is rigged in advance through the use of software from the Dominion company.

© Twitter screenshots/ RFI editing

By: Sophie Malibeaux |

Gregory Genevrier Follow

5 mins

Three weeks before the French presidential election, a disinformation operation is trying to tarnish the legitimacy of the ballot.

Taking advantage of a campaign context disrupted by the war in Ukraine, infox denounce in advance a rigged election on the model of what happened in the United States in 2020.

Advertising

At the heart of the disinformation campaign, we find the Canadian company Dominion Voting Systems, which supporters of Donald Trump had wrongly accused of having tampered with the results for the benefit of Joe Biden. 

According to exchanges on social networks, the same pattern would emerge in France for the presidential election of April 10 and 24, 2022. The results of the ballot would be rigged through the use of Dominion computer software, supposedly integrated into the machines to vote, or in the computers that collect the votes.

Some claim that the counting of votes in France would be entrusted to this company, “ 

without a call for tenders

 ”.

According to this narrative, this is how outgoing President Emmanuel Macron would manage to ensure the renewal of his mandate. 

ALERT 🛑🛑🛑: Dominion chosen without a call for tenders by Darmanin to centralize the votes!!

We do not change a software that cheats well.

— Florent Ly-Machabert (@FLyMachabert) March 18, 2022

However, everything is wrong.

This theory is not based on any factual element.

No contract was signed between Dominion and the French State.

The company confirmed this to us in writing: “ 

Dominion does not operate in France

 ”.

The Ministry of the Interior does not and has never used the services of the Dominion company in the context of the organization of the elections

 ", specified for its part to

Le Monde

the Ministry of the Interior.

In France, the centralization of the results goes through a computer system developed internally by the National Agency for the Security of Information Systems (Anssi).

The software therefore does not depend on Dominion or any other service provider. 

As for Dominion in the United States, it should be recalled that the allegations of fraud turned out to be false.

There is no longer any doubt today that the false information published in November 2020 in the United States emanates from a report fabricated by the team of outgoing President Donald Trump following his electoral failure.

In an investigation published on March 17, the British daily newspaper

The Guardian

reveals the real authors of the report and their objective: to justify the maintenance in power of Donald Trump on the pretext of links between Dominion and a Venezuelan state company.

This foreign interference would have allowed the incumbent team to invalidate the election results.

A scenario invented from scratch.

Furthermore, none of the legal actions for massive fraud have been successful.

Use of fake quotes

Although all the allegations against Dominion in the United States have been rejected, French conspiracy circles have been busy for several months recycling this theory in the French context. 

Earlier this week, the #Dominion found itself trending on Twitter, thanks in particular to a series of quotes evoking a ballot manipulated by all kinds of fraud.

Words put in the mouth of personalities as diverse as the presidents of Malta, Mexico, Brazil, Honduras, members of the Russian government, a Norwegian prime minister, or even a Haitian economist.

However, verification made, none of these personalities uttered such words targeting the electoral process in France. 

Examples of fake quotes circulating on social media.

© Twitter screenshots/ RFI editing

Depending on the scenario, it is the system for compiling the results that is targeted, or even electronic voting, and this, although in France, voting machines only concern 63 municipalities, i.e. barely 1.3 million. of voters.

The fake news about the rigging and alleged generalization of electronic voting was launched at the end of November 2021 by far-right politicians.

Extremists and plotters on the move

At the origin of the spread of these false quotes, there are mostly accounts from the conspiratorial sphere and support for candidates from the far right and, to a lesser extent, from the far left.

Trends highlighted by the Politoscope, a tool developed by David Chavalarias of the CNRS Institute of Complex Systems, to measure how networks manipulate us.

Some supporters of Éric Zemmour's Reconquête party are spreading the fake news, with for example a video posted on Facebook and Twitter denouncing a pseudo plot for the re-election of Emmanuel Macron. 

Among the followers of this theory, some relay initiatives to ensure " 

citizen control of the results

 ", with the key to incitement to insurrection, which is not unlike the method used by the supporters of Donald Trump in the States. States ahead of January 6, 2020. 

Towards a contestation of the results

For now, the dissemination of this theory remains limited to well-identified political and informational spheres.

But nothing says that these infox will not intensify as the election approaches.

This narrative aims above all to sow the seeds of a contestation of the results.

This is part of a broader dynamic of questioning democracy and its functioning.

... © FMM Graphic Studio

Newsletter

Receive all the international news directly in your mailbox

I subscribe

Follow all the international news by downloading the RFI application

google-play-badge_EN

  • Presidential France 2022

  • infox

  • Social networks

  • media education

  • Emmanuel Macron

  • French politics

On the same subject

The underside of the infox, the chronicle

Presidential election in France: electronic voting, a disinformation issue

The underside of the infox, the chronicle

Donald Trump accuses the Canadian firm Dominion and its voting machines, without proof