New York Post

HE’S THE UNFRIEND

Facebook spox flails away for boss Zuck

- By THEO WAYT

A “hatchet man” spokesman for Facebook is making enemies out of politician­s and reporters alike as the company takes heat in Washington, and insiders tell The Post he’s doing it to please Mark Zuckerberg.

This week alone, Facebook policy communicat­ions director Andy Stone — a 40-year-old communicat­ions veteran who worked for former Democratic Sens. Barbara Boxer and John Kerry — has questioned the credibilit­y of whistleblo­wer Frances Haugen, faced the ire of Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) and tussled with reporters, accusing them of trashing the company with “misleading” stories.

Insiders tell The Post that the real purpose of Stone’s caustic comms strategy is to please Zuckerberg and Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg — even if that means angering the politician­s who want to regulate Facebook and the reporters who cover it.

“The target audience is Mark and Sheryl and Facebook employees,” said a former Facebook worker who worked with Stone. “It doesn’t really matter if reporters or the general public like them.”

During past crises like the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook has played nice, buying apologetic full-page newspaper ads and sending Zuckerberg and Sandberg to testify before Congress. This time, the company’s top brass sent lower-ranking executives like security chief Antigone Davis to take the heat from Congress — and has apparently given Stone free rein to tussle with Facebook critics.

“The traditiona­l corporate p.r. playbook says that the company apologizes, offers to be part of the solution and generally finds ways to make Congress happy,” the former Facebook employee said. “Facebook is beyond that right now.”

Facebook and Stone, who joined the company in 2014, did not reply to requests for comment.

The former Facebook employee said that, in addition to Zuckerberg and Sandberg, Stone’s hard-line stance is directed at Joel Kaplan, a former President George W. Bush staffer and lobbyist who now works as Facebook’s DC-based global public policy chief.

Stone’s combativen­ess is also likely to please software engineers at Facebook, who the former employee said are more likely to support fighting back against politician­s and journalist­s who they believe treat the company unfairly.

“Every time one of these news cycles starts . . . some employees are concerned about what they read, and other employees, often on the engineerin­g side, want Facebook to be more aggressive and push back. So that’s the audience that Andy and the communicat­ions team are playing to right now,” the former employee said.

While Haugen was testifying in front of a Senate subcommitt­ee on Tuesday, Stone followed along and tried to downplay her credibilit­y.

“Just pointing out the fact that @FrancesHau­gen did not work on child safety or Instagram or research these issues and has no direct knowledge of the topic from her work at Facebook,” Stone tweeted while Haugen was still testifying. The former Facebook employee called that response “sexist and terrible.” Blackburn, the highest-ranking Republican on the subcommitt­ee, was also not amused.

“If Facebook wants to discuss its targeting of children, come forward and testify,” Blackburn wrote in response to Stone.

Stone has also accused CBS’s “60 Minutes,” which ran an interview with Haugen on Sunday, of using “select company materials to tell a misleading story.”

A comms executive who works with Big Tech companies other than Facebook also said Stone’s strategy has clearly been to please the company’s leadership — even if that means digging the company into a deeper hole on Capitol Hill.

“If you’re not going to change the public’s opinion with nuanced arguments and fully contextual­izing these facts, either because the facts are so bad or that’s just not going to happen, then maybe the best move at this point is to show your bosses you’re fighting for them,” the executive said.

Carole Cadwalladr, a journalist for the Guardian who broke the Cambridge Analytica story, told Input she had clashed with Stone long before he emerged as Facebook’s chief critic of Haugen.

Cadwalladr said Stone used “deliberate deceptions regarding Cambridge Analytica and repeatedly trolled me.”

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