The news: Meta is axing political ads in the EU as of October, citing an uncertain regulatory environment with “unworkable requirements.”
- The company stated in a blog post that the pullback will include ads related to political, electoral, or social issues, and specifically pointed to conflicts with the EU’s Transparency and Targeting of Political Advertising (TTPA) regulation.
- “We have been left with an impossible choice: Alter our services to offer an advertising product which doesn’t work for advertisers or users, without guarantee that our solution would be viewed as compliant, or stop allowing political, electoral, and social issue ads in the EU,” Meta said.
Under the TTPA, political ads must be labeled and identify factors like who paid for it, for which election, and whether ad targeting techniques were used.
This decision stands in stark contrast to Meta’s approach to political content in the US: In January, Meta started phasing political content back into its platforms.
Cost to bear: Unlike platforms like X or Reddit, political ads aren’t a major part of Meta’s business. Cutting them out may have been less of a headache than adapting to TTPA rules.
“(Government and political ads are) not really a material contributor to revenue growth for us,” CFO Susan Li said on a Q4 2023 earnings call. Those earnings aren’t zero, though.
Copping out? “Instead of deciphering what counts as “political,” they’re hitting pause to dodge fines and drama. Is it justified? Maybe. But critics say it’s a cop-out that could silence smaller voices right before key elections,” said EMARKETER senior director of briefings Jeremy Goldman.
“Still, Europeans won’t be starved for political info. … Meta’s move won’t stop democracy, but it might force campaigns to get creative.”
Our take: Meta's decision signals how fast platforms can change ad policies and how little time marketers have to react. If labeling systems or ad review processes change for the EU—or broadly apply to topics adjacent to social issues—advertisers may need to recalibrate campaigns to avoid triggering enforcement.
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