Porterville Recorder

Politician­s blocking people on social media ignites debate

- By BRADY MCCOMBS

SALT LAKE CITY — An emerging debate about whether elected officials violate people’s free speech rights by blocking them on social media is spreading across the U.S. as groups sue or warn politician­s to stop the practice.

The American Civil Liberties Union this week sued Maine Gov. Paul Lepage and sent warning letters to Utah’s congressio­nal delegation. It followed recent lawsuits against the governors of Maryland and Kentucky and President Donald Trump.

Trump’s frequent and often unorthodox use of Twitter and allegation­s he blocks people with dissenting views has raised questions about what elected officials can and cannot do on their official social media pages.

Politician­s at all levels increasing­ly embrace social media to discuss government business, sometimes at the expense of traditiona­l town halls or in-person meetings.

“People turn to social media because they see their elected officials as being available there and they’re hungry for opportunit­ies to express their opinions and share feedback,” said Anna Thomas, spokeswoma­n for the ACLU of Utah. “That includes people who disagree with public officials.”

Most of the officials targeted so far — all Republican­s — say they are not violating free speech but policing social media pages to get rid of people who post hateful, violent, obscene or abusive messages.

A spokeswoma­n for Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan called the Aug. 1 lawsuit against him “frivolous” and said his office has a clear policy and will “remove all hateful and violent content” and “coordinate­d spam attacks.”

The ACLU accused Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin of blocking more than 600 people on Facebook and Twitter. His office said he blocks people who post “obscene and abusive language or images, or repeated off-topic comments and spam.”

Spokesmen for Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch and Rep. Mia Love, who were singled out by the ACLU, said people are rarely blocked and only after they have violated rules posted on their Facebook pages to prevent profanity, vulgarity, personal insults or obscene comments.

“We are under no obligation to allow Senator Hatch’s Facebook page to be used as a platform for offensive content or misinforma­tion,” spokesman Matt Whitlock said.

Katie Fallow, senior staff attorney at Columbia University’s Knight First Amendment Institute, which sued Trump last month, said there’s no coordinate­d national effort to target Republican­s. The goal is to establish that all elected officials — no matter the party — must stop blocking people on social media.

“If it’s mainly used to speak to and hear from constituen­ts, that’s a public forum and you can’t pick and choose who you hear from,” Fallow said.

Rob Anderson, chairman of Utah’s Republican Party, scoffed at the notion that politician­s are violating free-speech rights by weeding out people who post abusive content.

“You own your Facebook page and if you want to block somebody or hide somebody, that’s up to you,” Anderson said. “Why else is there a tab that says hide or block?”

Court decisions about how elected officials can and cannot use their accounts are still lacking in this new legal battlegrou­nd, but rules for public forums side with free-speech advocates, said Erwin Chemerinsk­y, dean of the University of California­berkeley Law School.

For instance, lower court rulings say the government can’t deny credential­s to journalist­s because their reporting is critical, he said.

“These are government officials communicat­ing about government business. They can’t pick or choose based on who they like or who likes them,” Chemerinsk­y said.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY ROBERT F. BUKATY ?? In this March 8 photo, Maine Gov. Paul Lepage speaks at a town hall meeting in Yarmouth, Maine. An emerging debate about whether elected officials are violating people’s free speech rights by blocking them on social media is spreading across the nation...
AP PHOTO BY ROBERT F. BUKATY In this March 8 photo, Maine Gov. Paul Lepage speaks at a town hall meeting in Yarmouth, Maine. An emerging debate about whether elected officials are violating people’s free speech rights by blocking them on social media is spreading across the nation...

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