Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trump: Twitter ‘shadow banning’ some in GOP

- JOHN WAGNER AND TONY ROMM

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump took aim at Twitter on Thursday, accusing the social media company of a “discrimina­tory and illegal practice” that has resulted in limiting the visibility of prominent Republican­s in search results.

Republican­s have been up in arms since Vice News reported Wednesday that, as a result of a technique known as “shadow banning,” Republican National Committee chairman Ronna McDaniel and several conservati­ve GOP congressma­n were no longer appearing in an auto-populated drop-down search box.

“Twitter ‘ SHADOW BANNING’ prominent Republican­s. Not good,” Trump wrote to his 53 million Twitter followers. “We will look into this discrimina­tory and illegal practice at once! Many complaints.”

A Twitter spokesman declined to comment Thursday morning on the president’s tweet.

The social media company has said it is aware that some accounts are not automatica­lly populating in the search box and is working to address the issue.

In a tweet Wednesday, Kayvon Beykpour, head of product for Twitter, said the company was not targeting Republican­s and that it is

working to alter its usage of “behavior signals” that inform its search results.

“To be clear, our behavioral ranking doesn’t make judgements based on political views or the substance of tweets,” Beykpour tweeted.

Vice News reported that Democrats, including some of the party’s most liberal members, were not being “shadow banned” in the same way, according to a review by the publicatio­n.

In the wake of the report, McDaniel and other Republican­s have castigated Twitter.

“The notion that social media companies would suppress certain political points of view should concern every American,” McDaniel said Wednesday. “Twitter owes the public answers to what’s really going on.”

Donald Trump Jr., the president’s eldest son, also weighed in, sending a tweet Wednesday that said: “So now Twitter is censoring GOP Chairwoman? Enough is enough with this crap.”

The president’s tweet Thursday could create new political headaches for Twitter and its tech peers in Silicon Valley, which have faced months of accusation­s — from the highest echelons of the Republican Party — that they are biased against conservati­ves.

Right-leaning users contend that they are being unfairly targeted, censored and suspended compared with their liberal counterpar­ts.

The accusation­s have even made their way into some Republican­s’ election-year pitches to voters: U.S. Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R- Calif., who is angling to become speaker of the House next year, has run ads on Facebook that fundraise around allegation­s of anti-conservati­ve bias on social media.

Twitter itself has admitted mistakes, even apologizin­g after an incident in 2017 in which it initially banned a congressma­n from promoting a tweeted video that discussed abortion. But the company has stressed repeatedly that it seeks to apply its policies evenhanded­ly.

“Our success as a company depends on making Twitter a safe space for free expression,” said Nick Pickles, a policy aide who testified on behalf of Twitter at a congressio­nal hearing on alleged anti-conservati­ve bias earlier this month.

Meanwhile, Twitter chief executive Jack Dorsey has sought to defuse tensions with conservati­ves through a series of private gatherings with conservati­ve leaders.

His trip to the nation’s capital in June, for example, included a dinner with Mercedes Schlapp, one of Trump’s top aides, and Greta Van Susteren, a former Fox News host, sources previously told The Washington Post. Some in attendance told Dorsey that they felt conservati­ves had been painted in a negative light on the site’s Moments feature, which tracks national stories and issues. Others raised fears of shadow-banning.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States