The newest ads by a conservative right-wing activist group have earned it a second complaint to the Australian Electoral Commission over a potential breach of electoral laws on social media.
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The ads were described as "smear campaigning" and spreading "misleading information and lies" by one of their new targets, former Wallaby and now independent Senate candidate in the ACT, David Pocock.
Advance Australia, which is registered for political donations, was already under scrutiny for its ad depicting Chinese leader Xi Jinping as voting for Labor.
The AEC was concerned the previous ad could encourage informal voting due to its use of a tick on the ballot paper instead of numbers.
In one of the new ads, under the caption "what lies beneath", the lobby group has an image of Mr Pocock digitally manipulated to show him wearing a Greens Party shirt.
Another ad depicts the former rugby great with fellow independent candidate Professor Kim Rubenstein and Labor senator Katy Gallagher along with Greens candidate Dr Tjanara Goreng Goreng under the caption "four shades of green".
On Facebook the ads are marked "paid for by Advance Australia" but does not indicate the name of the authorising person.
The AEC does not have powers to determine the truthfulness of political advertising, and only focuses on the inclusion of information that indicated who had authorised the message.
The Canberra Times has sought comment from Advance Australia.
Mr Pocock said the ads demonstrate the need for clean and fair political campaigning.
"We are already seeing false and misleading campaign advertising being rolled out," he said.
"These dishonest, cheap political attack ads only serve to further add to people's existing distrust and frustration with politics.
"This is exactly why we need federal truth in political advertising laws and a federal anti-corruption watchdog with real power and political donations reform."
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The Pocock campaign confirmed it would be filing a complaint with the electoral body over the Advance Australia ads.
"The people of Canberra, and indeed the country, are tired of lies, finger-pointing and blame for political gain. They want leaders who are honest, trustworthy and transparent."
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