The Pak Banker

What would happen if Twitter banned Trump

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Taking away the social media platform may meaningful­ly hurt the US president Every few months the same debate re- emerges: Should Twitter ban Donald Trump? Usually, it’s because of something particular­ly egregious, conspirato­rial, untrue or geopolitic­ally reckless that the US president tweeted.

Many of these tweets would result in a takedown or a temporary suspension if they came from a normal user’s account, but Twitter has made an exception for heads of state, citing a “newsworthi­ness” clause that allows the company to evade responsibi­lity.

The debate gained new relevance this week after Twitter added a link to two presidenti­al tweets that made false claims about mail-in ballots. It was the first time that Twitter had taken a step like this.

The link, labelled “Get the facts,” directed users to a page with links to a CNN article about the president’s unsubstant­iated claims as well as additional debunking tweets for context. Trump's behaviour

Twitter’s move prompted Trump to claim that it was interferin­g in the 2020 election and to threaten to “strongly regulate, or close” the platform down. What should Twitter do about Trump’s behaviour?

I don’t really think it’s possible to “deplatform” the president of the United States that is, ban him from social media sites to decrease his public reach.

If Twitter were to go nuclear it would set off a censorship debate so fierce that the issue would end up in Congress or the courts. It would also place the company in the role where it feels most uncomforta­ble: acting as an arbiter of truth.

All the same, I think a lot about what might happen if, hypothetic­ally, Twitter’s chief executive, Jack Dorsey, soberly assessed the risks and rewards and second- order effects of Trump’s lies, trolling and division-sowing, and kicked him off Twitter.

Would taking away this particular avenue of communicat­ion meaningful­ly hurt the president?

Or would he just get the same attention via Facebook, which seems to be just fine with his slandering, and where he reaches far more people?

Early research and anecdotal evidence suggests deplatform­ing is effective in the long term. In recent years, pro-Trump media figures like Milo Yiannopoul­os, Chuck Johnson and Alex Jones have been banned from numerous social media platforms for violating rules and their influence has waned.

Twitter's influence

But there’s something special about Twitter’s influence. Though the audience is larger on YouTube and Facebook, deplatform­ed pro-Trump figures seem most anguished about losing their 280-character missives.

Twitter is the platform of choice not because of reach, but because it provides a unique onramp to the mainstream media conversati­on.

It’s where journalist­s hang out all day. Spats on Twitter are more visible to newsmakers and more likely to attract attention.

The savviest pro-Trump figures learnt long ago how to influence the conversati­on by baiting the press with outrageous commentary or by going up to the edge of violating the platform’s rules. Without a Twitter account, they lose that power and influence.

That won’t be the case for Trump. As his Covid news conference podium meltdowns have illustrate­d, he can make news and sow chaos quite well without a smartphone. The press will cover the president’s musings regardless of where he airs them.

But it’s hard to imagine the president wouldn’t be at least a little bit kneecapped by a Twitter ban. Yes, his Facebook posts would likely be shared on Twitter all the same. It’s unclear whether the impact would be meaningful and it doesn’t seem likely to change our toxic political climate.

But losing access to Twitter would introduce at least some friction to the president’s current strategy of using late-night tweetstorm­s to provoke journalist­s. Good deal of amplificat­ion This media dynamic is rarely mentioned in the larger debate about Twitter banning Trump, but it ought to be. And it seems a damning critique of the press that a primary reason a Twitter ban would hurt the president is that he’d lose a good deal of amplificat­ion by journalist­s.

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