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Election Advertising – rants from the Cafestudy Soapbox

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Posted by: Caféstudy

7th Jun 2013 09:16am


When we asked you what you thought about the political parties advertising in the run up to the election later this year, we clearly hit a nerve with a lot of you! A good excuse for a rant it seems – and here are some of your views:

It’s all spin

“Ads can’t even pretend to be informative and unbiased. They are ads after all, they have not been funded to simply ‘inform’ the public” (Annie)

You are cynical about the messages delivered to voters via advertising. Nobody believes what they say – words you came up with to describe the content of the ads include deceit, lies, and false information. You think that they are only saying what they want you to hear. You want to be educated about what the parties are offering, but do not believe that advertising is the way to do this.

Nothing more than a slanging match

“Political advertising bags out the other party and doesn’t really tell you what each parties policies are about” (Hawkey)

None of the blame game rubbish, you say! A slanging match doesn’t ring true, and makes you even less likely to believe the messages.

It’s a waste of tax-payers money

The other issue which riles you is the money spent on advertising. According to you there should be a ceiling on amount of money spent on political ads – money that you believe should be spent on other things.

What would work then?

“A live political speech and/or debate with question time would be suffice to allow voters to make their decision” (Ram)

Instead of advertising, you believe that political debates, news and current affairs programmes are the best way to inform voters. Instead of agenda-driven and ‘biased’ advertising, you want to be presented with unbiased information and be allowed to make up your own minds. Live debates with questions from an audience are where the real facts are uncovered - and there is nowhere for the policitians to hide!

frilly
  • 3rd Jul 2013 10:49am

I really do enjoy current affairs programmes but I do also feel that at times they also can be slanted for or against a party or person. There have been times I have felt this very strongly not necessarily politics but against a product, information about an illness or treatment in a disease.
At this moment I am sorry to say I cannot think of an example because they were programmes I watched a fair time ago. I just remember feeling so strongly at the time that the program did not appear to giving equal time and it was giving not just information but putting over almost a decision. Definitely a very slanted point of view, it disturbed me because it was an illness I was involved in.
I really am starting a new subject here not relying to anyone
The good that came out of it was I went off and researched the subject myself. It did make me concerned though for the people who just accepted the point of view give,


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