Khanna and Gadde at centre of Hunter Biden’s laptop story disclosure
TWO Indian Americans, Congressman Ro Khanna and Vijaya Gadde, prominently figure in US president Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden’s laptop story whose full disclosure – Twitter CEO Elon Musk has announced – will be released on the microblogging site.
Musk, the world’s richest man and who purchased Twitter last month, said last Friday (2) he would release details about what he described as Twitter’s “suppression” of a controversial story by the New York Post about Hunter Biden’s laptop that was published just before the 2020 US election.
He also tweeted that it would be “awesome” and there would be a “live Q&A” on the topic. The story claimed to contain emails retrieved from a laptop belonging to Hunter.
The New York Post said it learned of the emails’ existence from Trump’s ex-White House chief strategist Steve Bannon and that the paper obtained the emails from Trump’s personal lawyer at the time Rudy Giuliani.
Twitter initially limited the distribution of the story, citing concerns that it could be the result of a foreign disinformation campaign.
But the social media company quickly backtracked on its response, with then-CEO Jack Dorsey calling the decision to block the link “unacceptable.”
Khanna is the Democratic Congressman representing Silicon Valley in the US House of Representatives, while Gadde, an attorney, served as general counsel and the head of legal, policy, and trust at Twitter, before she was fired by new boss Musk.
A series of tweets along with internal communications of Twitter was released by writer Matt Taibbi.
According to the information released by Taibbi, Khanna appears to have questioned the decision of Twitter to restrict access to an investigative report of the New York Post newspaper on the laptop of Hunter.
Khanna in a confidential email to Gadde opposed the so-called censorship by Twitter.
“I say this as a total Biden partisan and convinced he did not do anything wrong. But the story now has become more about censorship than relatively innocuous emails and it’s become a bigger deal than it would have been,” Khanna wrote to Gadde.
“In the heat of a presidential campaign, restricting dissemination of newspaper articles (even if New York Post is far right) seems like it will invite more backlash than it will do good,” Khanna wrote to Gadde and requested her not to share the text of their emails.
Khanna said that such a move by Twitter appeared to be a violation of the 1st Amendment principles.
“If there is a hack of classified information or other information that could expose a serious war crime and the NYT [New York Times] was to publish it, I think NYT should have that right. A journalist should not be held accountable for the illegal actions of the source unless they actively aided the hack,” Khanna said.
In response to Khanna’s email, Gadde defended Twitter’s policy and its decision on the Post story. “We put out a clarifying thread of tweets earlier this evening to explain our policy around the posting of private information and linking directly to hacked materials,” she wrote.
“The press secretary’s account was not permanently suspended – we requested that she delete the tweet containing material that is in violation of our rules and her account is restricted until she complies,” Gadde wrote.
According to Taibbi, both parties had access to these tools.
For instance, in 2020, requests from both the Trump White House and the Biden campaign were received and honoured. However, this system wasn’t balanced, he claimed.