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Main Authors: Damião, Íris, Almeida, Paulo, Franco, João, Santos, Nuno, Magalhães, Pedro C., Gonçalves-Sá, Joana
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.23474
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author Damião, Íris
Almeida, Paulo
Franco, João
Santos, Nuno
Magalhães, Pedro C.
Gonçalves-Sá, Joana
author_facet Damião, Íris
Almeida, Paulo
Franco, João
Santos, Nuno
Magalhães, Pedro C.
Gonçalves-Sá, Joana
contents Search engines (SEs) and large language models (LLMs) are central to political information access, yet their algorithmic decisions and potential underlying biases remain underexplored. We developed a standardized, privacy-preserving, bot-and-proxy methodology to audit four SEs and two LLMs before the 2024 European Parliament and US presidential elections. We collected answers to approximately 4,360 queries related to elections in five EU countries and 15 US counties, identified political entities and topics in those answers, and mapped them to ideological positions (EU) or issue associations (US). In Europe, SE results disproportionately mentioned far-right entities beyond levels expected from polls, past elections, or media salience. In the US, Google strongly favored topics more important to Republican voters, while other search engines favored issues more relevant to Democrats. LLMs responses were more balanced, although there is evidence of overrepresentation of far-right (and Green) entities. These results show evidence of bias and open important discussions on how even small skews in widely used platforms may influence democratic processes, calling for systematic audits of their outputs.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_23474
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Evidence of political bias in search engines and language models before major elections
Damião, Íris
Almeida, Paulo
Franco, João
Santos, Nuno
Magalhães, Pedro C.
Gonçalves-Sá, Joana
Computers and Society
Search engines (SEs) and large language models (LLMs) are central to political information access, yet their algorithmic decisions and potential underlying biases remain underexplored. We developed a standardized, privacy-preserving, bot-and-proxy methodology to audit four SEs and two LLMs before the 2024 European Parliament and US presidential elections. We collected answers to approximately 4,360 queries related to elections in five EU countries and 15 US counties, identified political entities and topics in those answers, and mapped them to ideological positions (EU) or issue associations (US). In Europe, SE results disproportionately mentioned far-right entities beyond levels expected from polls, past elections, or media salience. In the US, Google strongly favored topics more important to Republican voters, while other search engines favored issues more relevant to Democrats. LLMs responses were more balanced, although there is evidence of overrepresentation of far-right (and Green) entities. These results show evidence of bias and open important discussions on how even small skews in widely used platforms may influence democratic processes, calling for systematic audits of their outputs.
title Evidence of political bias in search engines and language models before major elections
topic Computers and Society
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.23474