The Denver Post

Facebook considers reinstatin­g Trump

- By Barbara Ortutay

Since the day after the deadly Jan. 6 riots on the U.S. Capitol, former President Donald Trump’s social media accounts have been silent — muzzled for inciting violence using the platforms as online megaphones.

On Wednesday, his fate on Facebook, the biggest social platform around, will be decided. The company’s Oversight Board is expected to announce its ruling around 7 a.m. MST. If it rules in Trump’s favor, Facebook has seven days to reinstate the account. If the board upholds Facebook’s decision, Trump will remain “indefinite­ly” suspended.

Politician­s, free speech experts and activists around the world are watching the decision closely. It has implicatio­ns not only for Trump but for tech companies, world leaders and people across the political spectrum — many of whom have wildly conflictin­g views of the proper role for technology companies when it comes to regulating online speech and protecting people from abuse and misinforma­tion.

After years of handling Trump’s inflammato­ry rhetoric with a light touch, Facebook and Instagram took the drastic step of silencing his accounts in January. In announcing the unpreceden­ted move, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the risk of allowing Trump to continue using the platform was too great.

“The shocking events of the last 24 hours clearly demonstrat­e that President Donald Trump intends to use his remaining time in office to undermine the peaceful and lawful transition of power to his elected successor, Joe Biden,” Zuckerberg wrote on his Facebook page on Jan. 7.

A day before Facebook’s announceme­nt, Trump unveiled a new blog on his personal website, “From the Desk of Donald J. Trump.”

While the page includes a dramatic video claiming, “A BEACON OF FREEDOM ARISES” and hailing “A PLACE TO SPEAK FREELY AND SAFELY,” the page is little more than a display of Trump’s recent statements — available elsewhere on the website — that can be easily shared on Facebook and Twitter, the platforms that banished him after the riot.

While Trump aides have spent months teasing his plans to launch his own social media platform, his spokesman, Jason Miller, said the blog was something separate.

“President Trump’s website is a great resource to find his latest statements and highlights from his first term in office, but this is not a new social media platform,” he tweeted. “We’ll have additional informatio­n coming on that front in the very near future.”

Barred from social media, Trump does interviews with friendly news outlets and has emailed statements to reporters through his office and political group.

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