Yuma Sun

In a first, Twitter adds fact-check warnings to Trump tweets

- ArrOCIATdD oRdrr

For the first time, Twitter has flagged some of President Donald Trump’s tweets with a fact-check warning.

On Tuesday, Twitter added a warning phrase to two Trump tweets that called mail-in ballots “fraudulent” and predicted that “mail boxes will be robbed,” among other things. Under the tweets, there is now a link reading “Get the facts about mail-in ballots” that guides users to a Twitter “moments” page with fact checks and news stories about Trump’s unsubstant­iated claims.

Until now, the president has simply blown past Twitter’s half-hearted attempts to enforce rules intended to promote civility and “healthy” conversati­on on its most prominent user. Trump frequently amplifies misinforma­tion, spreads abuse and uses his pulpit to personally attack private citizens and public figures alike — all forbidden under Twitter’s official rules.

In a statement, Twitter said Trump’s vote-by-mail tweets “contain potentiall­y misleading informatio­n about voting processes and have been labeled to provide additional context around mail-in ballots.”

Trump has never previously faced Twitter sanctions on his account. The husband of a woman who died by accident two decades ago in an office of then-GOP Rep. Joe Scarboroug­h recently demanded that Twitter remove the president’s baseless tweets suggesting that Scarboroug­h, now a fierce Trump critic, killed her. Twitter issued a statement expressing its regret to the husband but so far has taken no action on those tweets.

Over the weekend, the president issued several tweets calling into question the legality of mail-inballots. The storm of tweets followed Facebook and Twitter posts from Trump last week that wrongly claimed Michigan’s secretary of state mailed ballots to 7.7 million registered voters. Trump later deleted the tweet and posted an edited version that still threatened to hold up federal funds.

Twitter policy forbids sharing “false or misleading informatio­n intended to intimidate or dissuade people from participat­ing in an election or other civic process.” While it has previously flagged tweets conveying misinforma­tion about the COVID-19 pandemic, it has never before put warnings on tweets for any other reason.

Trump 2020 campaign manager Brad Parscale accused Twitter of “clear political bias” that he said led the campaign to pull “all our advertisin­g from Twitter months ago.” Twitter has banned all political advertisin­g since last November.

Trump’s Scarboroug­h tweets offer another example of the president using Twitter to spread misinforma­tion — in this case, about an accidental death that Trump persists in linking to the co-host of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” show.

“My request is simple: Please delete these tweets,” Timothy J. Klausutis wrote to Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey last week.

The body of Lori Kaye Klausutis, 28, was found in Scarboroug­h’s Fort Walton Beach, Florida, congressio­nal office on July 20, 2001. Trump has repeatedly tried to implicate Scarboroug­h in the death even though Scarboroug­h was in Washington, not Florida, at the time.

There is no mystery to the death of Lori Klausutis. Medical officials ruled that the aide, who had a heart condition and told friends hours earlier that she wasn’t feeling well, had fainted and hit her head. Foul play was not suspected.

Klausutis wrote in his letter that he has struggled to move on with his life due to the ongoing “bile and misinforma­tion” spread about his wife on the platform, most recently by Trump. His wife continues to be the subject of conspiracy theories 20 years after her death.

Trump’s tweets violate Twitter’s community rules and terms of service, he said. “An ordinary user like me would be banished,” he wrote.

At Tuesday’s White House briefing, press secretary Kayleigh McEnany repeatedly refused to say why Trump was pressing the unfounded allegation­s or whether he would stop tweeting about them. Instead, she focused on remarks that Scarboroug­h made about the case that she said were inappropri­ate and flippant.

Dorsey did not reply directly to Klausutis’ letter and has not taken any action on the president’s tweets. In a statement, Twitter said it was “deeply sorry about the pain these statements, and the attention they are drawing, are causing the family.”

Scarboroug­h has urged the president to stop his baseless attacks.

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PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP’S TWEETS

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