A fabricated news story claiming Housing Minister Clare O'Neil called One Nation voters 'unintelligent' and said they 'likely went to public school' has been circulating on social media. The fake article used a stolen SBS News logo to look real. SBS News confirmed the logo was misappropriated and the story is completely false. Clare O'Neil's office also told SBS News the quotes were fake. The posts have been traced back as early as 28 June on private social media accounts.
This is part of a growing trend of fake news stories designed to look like real news websites. Misinformation like this spreads quickly on social media because it plays on political divisions. AAP FactCheck, which checks facts online, confirmed the post was fake. One Nation is a right-wing political party in Australia that has been gaining support in polls ahead of the NSW state election. Fake stories targeting politicians from all sides can influence how people vote and damage trust in the media.
Fake news tricks people into believing lies about politicians and issues. It makes it harder for voters to make informed choices and erodes trust in real journalism.

A fabricated news story claiming Housing Minister Clare O'Neil called One Nation voters 'unintelligent' and said they 'likely went to public school' has been circulating on social media. The fake article used a stolen SBS News logo to look real. SBS News confirmed the logo was misappropriated and the story is completely false. Clare O'Neil's office also told SBS News the quotes were fake. The posts have been traced back as early as 28 June on private social media accounts.

This is part of a growing trend of fake news stories designed to look like real news websites. Misinformation like this spreads quickly on social media because it plays on political divisions. AAP FactCheck, which checks facts online, confirmed the post was fake. One Nation is a right-wing political party in Australia that has been gaining support in polls ahead of the NSW state election. Fake stories targeting politicians from all sides can influence how people vote and damage trust in the media.

Fake news tricks people into believing lies about politicians and issues. It makes it harder for voters to make informed choices and erodes trust in real journalism.

πŸ“° Source: News Source
sbs.com.au β†—
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