The Day

House, Senate invite tech giants to testify

Facebook, Twitter and Google reps may partake in Russia election interferen­ce investigat­ion

- By MARY CLARE JALONICK, CHAD DAY and TOM LOBIANCO

Washington — The House and Senate intelligen­ce committees are inviting tech giants Facebook, Twitter and Alphabet — the parent company of Google — to appear for public hearings as part of their investigat­ions into Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 election, The Associated Press has learned.

The House intelligen­ce committee is planning to hold a hearing in October and the Senate intelligen­ce committee has invited witnesses to appear Nov. 1. The announceme­nts of public hearings come the day before Twitter is scheduled to hold closed-door staff briefings with both panels.

Rep. Adam Schiff of California, the top Democrat on the House intelligen­ce committee, confirmed the House hearing in an interview with the AP, though he noted a date had not yet been set.

In a joint statement, Schiff and Republican Rep. Mike Conaway from Texas, who is leading the House investigat­ion, said they will hold an open hearing in the coming month “with representa­tives from tech companies in order to better understand how Russia used online tools and platforms to sow discord in and influence our election.”

They added, “Congress and the American people need to hear this important informatio­n directly from these companies.”

The details of the invitation from the Senate intelligen­ce committee were confirmed by two people familiar with the panel’s interactio­ns with the companies. They spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the private invitation­s.

It’s not yet clear whether the companies will accept the invitation­s to appear. Facebook and Google confirmed they had received the Senate invitation­s and Twitter declined to comment.

The hearings come as both panels have been scrutinizi­ng the ways that the social media platforms and online ads were used by Russians to influence the election. The committees are examining the spread of false news stories and propaganda and whether anyone in the United States helped target those stories to specific users on social media platforms.

In the closed-door briefings today, Twitter’s representa­tives will likely face questions about the spread of false news stories and propaganda through the use of fake accounts and automated bot networks.

In a statement this month, Twitter said it “deeply respects the integrity of the election process,” and it has worked to combat “bots and other forms of manipulati­on that violate our Terms of Service.”

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