Hartford Courant

GOP candidates attacking Big Tech

To fire up midterm voters, hopefuls tap into resentment

- By Sam Metz

RENO, Nev. — Shortly after launching his campaign last year for the Republican nomination in Nevada’s U.S. Senate race, Sam Brown got into a scrape with Twitter.

A Purple Heart recipient who was severely burned by an IED blast in Afghanista­n, Brown posted a picture of himself saluting while in uniform along with the words “Freedom Isn’t Free.”

After he filed for the Senate seat three days later, he said his post was flagged with a “potentiall­y sensitive content” warning that would require Twitter users to click or tap on the post to confirm they want to view it.

Twitter explained the restrictio­n by pointing to Brown’s account settings, which the company has said he could adjust.

Regardless of what triggered the label, it gave Brown a powerful opportunit­y to tap into the resentment toward large technology companies that increasing­ly courses through the Republican Party.

“Either my face, my scars were sensitive or the fact that someone would salute in uniform our American flag or, most likely, this came just a few hours after I filed to run for Senate,” Brown told Fox News at the time. “As a Republican, we’re very used to seeing censorship happen on the Big Tech platforms.”

As the primary season moves forward this week with contests in several states including Nevada, that sense of persecutio­n is animating the GOP effort to retake control of the Senate.

Brown’s GOP opponent, former state Attorney General Adam Laxalt, frequently knocks “censorship

of speech” as “one of the most onerous threats to our free democracy.” In Ohio, Senate Republican nominee J.D. Vance has warned that Big Tech companies are going to “destroy our nation.”

And in his controvers­ial 11-point plan to “rescue” America, Sen. Rick Scott of Florida, who leads the GOP effort to regain the Senate majority, threatens legal action against social media companies that “censor speech and cancel people.”

The GOP offensive comes as Elon Musk, the wealthiest person in the world, has engaged in a back-and-forth pursuit of purchasing Twitter, articulati­ng a philosophy aligned with many Republican­s who argue that the social media efforts to blunt misinforma­tion and propaganda have stifled conservati­ves from expressing their views.

Musk has said he would

allow Donald Trump to rejoin the platform. The former president’s account was locked after he helped spark the violent insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol on Jan 6, 2021.

For voters confrontin­g inflation, rising gas prices and gun violence, it’s unclear whether concerns about the role of large technology companies will resonate broadly this year. But it feeds a sense of animosity among some of the GOP’S most loyal voters, who remain angry that social media platforms barred the spread of vaccine and election misinforma­tion and that Twitter limited the circulatio­n of stories about Hunter Biden’s laptop before the 2020 election over fears that it was disinforma­tion from Russia.

Since then, no evidence has emerged of any Russian connection­s to the laptop.

“Big Tech is just doing what it wants to do and

wants to go along with the liberals on taking our country and making this 1984,” former teacher William Holden of Gardnervil­le, Nevada, said at a Republican Party event in rural Nevada.

The 73-year-old was referencin­g the dystopian novel by George Orwell about a society where “Big Brother is watching you” and the “Thought Police” monitor the ideas in people’s minds.

Despite such sentiment, a recent report by New York University researcher­s is one of several studies that have found no evidence of political bias dictating content moderation decisions on major platforms. NYU researcher­s noted that many conservati­ve voices thrive on Facebook, Twitter and Youtube.

Tech insiders in Washington and Silicon Valley remain largely unclear on how exactly Republican­s

plan to combat disinforma­tion or implement new rules on how social media moderates content if the party succeeds in flipping the U.S. Senate.

“There is a constituen­cy that tracks Elon Musk: contrarian voters who are tired of being bossed by Silicon Valley. But anti-tech rhetoric on the campaign trail or Twitter, no matter how hot it gets, will not magically transform into meaningful public policy outcomes in D.C.,” said Niki Christoff, a tech industry veteran and former GOP campaign operative.

Laxalt, the presumptiv­e front-runner in Nevada’s Republican Senate primary, refers to technology companies as agents of the radical left and “wokeness,” along with the media, academia and Hollywood.

In April, he told a crowd of supporters gathered in Las Vegas that Musk’s planned purchase was a “big win” over “radical Big Tech monopolies that have been stifling conservati­ve free speech.”

“To watch all these Twitter employees in their cry rooms because, ‘Oh, my God, Elon Musk has pledged to allow an open, robust debate,’ is really something to behold,” he said.

Beyond Nevada, Republican­s in Arizona and Ohio have also adopted Big Tech attacks as rallying cries, even when the candidates themselves have ties to Silicon Valley.

In Arizona, Blake Masters, a former venture capitalist running for the U.S. Senate with Trump’s backing, said Musk’s proposed $44 billion purchase of Twitter would be a win for both free speech and “election integrity” — a phrase Republican­s have used to raise questions about the legitimacy of U.S. elections, specifical­ly Trump’s defeat, despite a coalition of top government and industry officials declaring the 2020 election to be “the most secure in American history.”

“Beyond Elon, we need a suite of new policies, from treating the major social media companies as common carriers to writing a Digital Bill of Rights to requiring transparen­cy and oversight of Google’s search algorithm,” he said in a statement.

In Ohio, Vance, who previously worked in the tech industry, parlayed a question about transgende­r kids participat­ing in youth sports into an attack on Google, accusing the company of elevating search engine results that call into question traditiona­l gender roles.

“If we don’t go after the Big Tech companies, we might win a battle here and there, but the tech companies are going to destroy our nation and what it is to be a human being in this country,” he said at a GOP debate before he won his primary.

 ?? JOE MAIORANA/AP ?? GOP Senate nominee J.D. Vance of Ohio has warned Big Tech companies are going to “destroy our nation.”
JOE MAIORANA/AP GOP Senate nominee J.D. Vance of Ohio has warned Big Tech companies are going to “destroy our nation.”

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