Poland identifies foreign-funded political Facebook ads ahead of presidential election

Facebook has banned a number of political adverts that were identified by a Polish state agency as likely to be a foreign-funded attempt to interfere in the campaign for this Sunday's presidential election .
The nature and source of the adverts in question have not been officially confirmed, but two Polish media outlets claim to have identified them. Meanwhile, senior figures from both the ruling coalition and the opposition have suggested the adverts could be part of a Russian disinformation campaign.
⚠️ Possible attempt to interfere in the election campaign! NASK's Disinformation Analysis Center has identified political ads on the Facebook platform that may be financed from abroad. The materials were displayed in Poland.
Ad accounts involved in the campaign over the… pic.twitter.com/kGzXhLiY0v
— NASK (@NASK_pl) May 14, 2025
On Wednesday afternoon, NASK, a Polish state research institute tasked with, among other things, monitoring cyberthreats, announced that its Disinformation Analysis Center had identified political ads on Facebook that may be financed from abroad, something not permitted under Polish law.
They noted that more had been spent on those adverts over the last week than by any of the official campaign committees supporting the 13 candidates standing in Sunday's presidential election. NASK said that the adverts in question “were ostensibly intended to support one of the candidates and discredit others.”
However, “analysis indicates a possible provocation…[whose] purpose could have been to act to the detriment of the candidate allegedly supported by such ads and to destabilize the situation before the presidential elections”, added the agency.
NASK did not specify which candidate was being supported in the adverts and which were being attacked, but said that the three individuals in question are Rafał Trzaskowski , Karol Nawrocki and Sławomir Mentzen , who are the three frontrunners in the campaign according to polls.
It added that Poland's Internal Security Agency (ABW) had been notified and “actions are being taken to determine the sources of origin and financing of the campaign”. A few hours later, NASK announced that Facebook's owner, Meta, has blocked the adverts in question.
Meanwhile, Poland's defense minister, Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz, said that the digital affairs ministry was also investigating the issue and that “urgent clarification of this matter is most necessary”, reports the Polish Press Agency (PAP).
“Let's not be manipulated by fake news that Russia has been spreading for years in various areas,” added Kosiniak-Kamysz. Last week, digital affairs minister Krzysztof Gawkorski that warned Poland is “facing an unprecedented attempt by Russia to interfere in the elections.”
"We are facing an unprecedented attempt by Russia to interfere in the current presidential elections in Poland," says digital affairs minister @KGawkowski
"There is no other EU country that faces similar threats", but "Poland knows how to defend itself" https://t.co/D0WC5psTOd
— Notes from Poland 🇵🇱 (@notesfrompoland) May 7, 2025
NASK did not provide any details regarding the content of the adverts it had identified as potential foreign-funded election interference nor their source. However, both OKO.press, a liberal fact-checking and analysis website, and Niezależna, a conservative news service, have unofficially done so.
They have both identified the source as two anonymous accounts – called “Wiesz Jak Nie Jest” (“You Know How It Isn't”) and “Stół Doróbych” (“Adults' Table”) – that have been buying political adverts on Facebook which attack Nawrocki and Mentzen and promote Trzaskowski.
OKO.press notes that “Wiesz Jak Nie Jest” initially featured criticism of Mentzen, the candidate of the far-right Confederation (Konfederacja) party, before switching to similar videos attacking Nawrocki, who is supported by the national-conservative Law and Justice (PiS), after Mentzen declined in the polls.
NASK warns against political ads purchased on FB by anonymous sponsors. We have been describing these ads in https://t.co/libf1YTYBX for weeks. According to @NASK_pl , they may be financed from abroad. The case was reported to the ABW. PiS also reacted. https://t.co/Armsjb3hmJ pic.twitter.com/JKLPvKqrr8
— Anna Mierzynska (@Anna_Mierzynska) May 14, 2025
Table of Adults, meanwhile, has promoted material praising Trzaskowski, the candidate of Civic Platform (PO), Poland's main centrist ruling party.
Over the last 30 days, “Wiesz Jak Nie Jest” has spent almost 286,000 zlotys (€68,000) on promoting such ads, which normally take the form of people speaking on the streets of Polish cities, while “Stół Adults” has spent over 141,000 zlotys, reports OKO.press.
Independent, meanwhile, claims that the websites linked to the two accounts were registered by a German company that is known to have previously registered websites used for pro-Russian disinformation.
However, OKO.press notes that the company is a major registrar where anyone can register a domain, meaning that the fact it was used by these particular websites does not provide any evidence of who is behind them.
⚠️NASK informs about an attempt of illegal interference in the election campaign⚠️
In the last 30 days alone:
📍The "Adults' Table" page on promotional videos https://t.co/xK5W0lt7XX . @trzaskowski_ spent PLN 141,795, including PLN 75,101 in the last week.
📍The "You Know How It Isn't" page on… pic.twitter.com/uHQZqOBnNM
— Adam Czarnecki (@czardam) May 14, 2025
Earlier on Wednesday (before NASK's announcement), two PiS MPs, Paweł Jabłoński and Michał Moskal, held a press conference raising concern about the two Facebook accounts and calling on the justice and interior ministers to take action.
“We are raising the alarm that, behind Rafał Trzaskowski's campaign, are…companies associated with foreign entities, whose activity bears the hallmarks of an organized disinformation operation,” said Moskal, noting that the trail leads to “a company associated with Russian disinformation”.
“We are talking about activity that could pose a real threat to the sovereignty of democratic elections in Poland,” he continued. “These are not just abuses – they are an attempt to steer the elections through foreign influence.”
Former PiS digital affairs minister Janusz Cieszyński, meanwhile, criticized NASK for only taking action now, weeks after concerns were raised over the Facebook accounts, and for not making clear in its statement that Trzaskowski was the beneficiary of the adverts.
💬 PiS spokesman @RafalBochenek : The NASK announcement is a disinformation message in this respect, that Rafał Trzaskowski is in any way a victim of this coordinated hate campaign. It is Rafał Trzaskowski and his people who are behind this campaign. We hope that the prosecutor's office will finally… pic.twitter.com/e3dPz0u4fN
— Law and Justice (@pisorgpl) May 14, 2025
Main image credit: Jakub Orzechowski / Agencja wyborcza.pl
notesfrompoland