Same Schmitz, Different Day
Suspected Russian actors are engaged in a renewed effort to target far-right audiences in the U.S. with politically divisive messaging ahead of the November midterm elections.

Key Findings
- Suspected Russian actors are engaged in a renewed effort to target far-right audiences in the U.S. with politically divisive messaging ahead of the November midterm elections.
- This includes direct attempts to undermine support for Democratic candidates in Pennsylvania, Georgia, New York, and Ohio. Other narratives promoted by the network comprise inflammatory messaging about sensitive cultural and political issues, as well as criticism of President Joe Biden.
- These narratives are primarily advanced via a series of political cartoons, which we assess were likely created by the actors and are almost certainly intended to go viral. Similar cartoons disseminated by this campaign have previously achieved significant levels of engagement from authentic online communities.
- Assets in the network have, for the first time, promoted entities publicly linked to Russian businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin, supporting our attribution of this campaign to actors associated with past activity of Russia’s Internet Research Agency.
- This latest, midterms-focused phase of the campaign has so far achieved minimal traction online. We are publicly sharing limited content samples and our recent observations about TTPs to raise awareness of the activity and its origins.
Léa Ronzaud
Senior Analyst
Léa Ronzaud leads monitoring and investigations into the detection and tracking of Russian influence operations and violent extremist groups. She also researches nihilistic violent extremism and hacktivism. Léa’s work has helped disrupt efforts by extremists in multiple countries to orchestrate real-world harm and exposed the inner workings of nation-state influence operations from Russia, China, and Iran.
Jack Stubbs
Chief Intelligence Officer
As Chief Intelligence Officer, Jack Stubbs led Graphika intelligence analysts to deliver social network analysis, information environment assessments, and other quantitative and qualitative research and reporting.

Tyler Williams
Vice President of Intel
Tyler Williams is an expert in open-source intelligence methodologies and structured analytic techniques. Under his leadership, Graphika's intelligence analysts illuminate commercial and security interests, from brand backlashes to state- and non-state-linked influence operations (IO), extremist movements, and other online manipulation and harms.
Related Posts

LA Wildfires: Graphika Assessment Of False Russian Narratives Cited By NPR
As wildfires have burned across Los Angeles and the world has watched first responders jump into action to save homes, Russian pro-Kremlin media and websites have been finding ways to fan the flames.
Read More
(Don’t) Blame it on the Bots.
When online outrage against a company or brand pops up, it can be easy to assume these incidents are solely due to armies of bots and inauthentic accounts.
Read More
Graphika In The News: The Guardian examines Chinese targeting of Hong Kong exiles
A new report from The Guardian citing Graphika found that Hong Kong exiles in the United Kingdom are being targeted online as part of a larger coordinated effort to attack China's opponents.
Read MoreSee How Graphika Can Help Your Team Act on This Intelligence
Graphika’s research team publishes regular insights on influence operations, disinformation, and online threats. Our platform gives your analysts continuous access to the same intelligence.