USA TODAY International Edition

Trump appeals Facebook suspension

Oversight Board has 90 days to issue a decision

- Jessica Guynn

The Facebook Oversight Board, which will decide whether Donald Trump’s indefinite suspension should be lifted, received an appeal on behalf of the former president arguing for his Facebook and Instagram accounts to be restored.

The Oversight Board has received about 9,000 comments from the public on the hotly contested question of whether to allow Trump access to his Facebook and Instagram accounts.

Facebook announced in January that it asked the Oversight Board to review its decision to suspend Trump on Jan. 7, the day after a group of the president’s supporters stormed the Capitol.

Trump’s accounts on Facebook and Instagram remain suspended pending the Oversight Board’s decision.

Trump’s appeal was first reported by Channel 4 News in the United Kingdom.

The Trump ban is the most consequent­ial case yet for the Oversight Board.

Facebook’s Oversight Board launched last year to review the toughest calls the company makes. It is supposed to function as an independen­t entity but gets financial backing and technical support from Facebook.

The Oversight Board has 90 days to make a decision. Its decision is binding and cannot be overruled by CEO Mark Zuckerberg or any other Facebook executive.

Zuckerberg and others have grown increasing­ly uneasy with the platform wielding the power to silence world leaders and reshape the nation’s online conversati­on.

“Our decision to suspend then- President Trump’s access was taken in extraordin­ary circumstan­ces: a U. S. president actively fomenting a violent insurrecti­on designed to thwart the peaceful transition of power; five people killed; legislator­s fleeing the seat of democracy,” Nick Clegg, Facebook’s vice president of global affairs, wrote last month. “This has never happened before – and we hope it will never happen again. It was an unpreceden­ted set of events which called for unpreceden­ted action.”

YouTube and other social media companies also indefinitely suspended Trump’s accounts. Snapchat and Twitter permanentl­y banned Trump.

“We faced an extraordin­ary and untenable circumstan­ce, forcing us to focus all of our actions on public safety,” Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey said. “Offline harm as a result of online speech is demonstrab­ly real, and what drives our policy and enforcemen­t above all.”

The decision to block Trump’s access to the major social media platforms after the Capitol riot was praised by Trump critics and had the support of most Americans, according to the Harris Poll. Trump supporters and free speech advocates warned it set a dangerous precedent.

Saying the suspension has driven “intense global interest,” the Oversight Board accepted the case and pledged to conduct “a thorough and independen­t assessment of the company’s decision.”

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