Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

7 users regain Trump Twitter access

- CHARLIE SAVAGE

WASHINGTON — The White House unblocked the accounts of seven Twitter users who sued President Donald Trump for barring them from viewing or responding to his tweets, even as the administra­tion has decided to appeal a federal judge’s ruling in May that Trump violated their constituti­onal rights.

The decision to unblock the plaintiffs from interactin­g with Trump’s account was a gesture of constituti­onal modesty by the Trump administra­tion at a time when he and his lawyers have been making increasing­ly aggressive assertions of executive powers. The judge had not ordered the president to unblock them as part of the ruling, instead leaving it up to the White House to decide how to respond.

Late Monday, the Justice Department informed the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, which is representi­ng the plaintiffs, that it had unblocked their accounts. But around the same time, the department filed notice in court that it was appealing the ruling to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York.

Jameel Jaffer, the executive director of the Knight Institute, said the organizati­on looked forward to defending the May ruling, by Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald of the Southern District of New York, before the appeals court.

“We’re pleased that the White House unblocked our clients from the president’s Twitter account but disappoint­ed that the government intends to appeal the district court’s thoughtful and well-supported ruling,” he said in a statement.

The case centers on novel issues raised by how the First Amendment applies to social media platforms used by government officials to interact with the public. The seven plaintiffs are Twitter users who were blocked from viewing or interactin­g with Trump’s account after criticizin­g or mocking him.

The plaintiffs argued that Trump’s account amounted to a public forum — a “digital town hall” — in which the president makes official policy pronouncem­ents and the public, by responding to his postings and to the tweets other people make in reply to them, engages in debate. That makes his decision to selectivel­y block people from participat­ing in that forum based on views they have expressed unconstitu­tional, they maintained.

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