? Facebook Should ban permanently President former Donald Trump
Using the social media platform to undermine democracy cannot be allowed
Avisit to Donald Trump’s now-defunct Facebook page is to stroll through the vestiges of his campaigns and his presidency: posts full of name calling and attacks, and ads full of outright lies.
Civil rights groups and activists have long pointed out that Facebook’s treatment of Trump is utterly unique: no other individual would be allowed to act like he did on the platform. Trump was allowed to stay only because Facebook essentially rewrote its rules for all politicians, in an attempt preemptively to allow Trump’s bad behavior. Even despite these political accommodations from Facebook, Trump still routinely violated those few rules that remained.
While the U.S. Capitol was under assault
on Jan. 6, then-president Trump posted a series of messages and videos to his Facebook page half-heartedly telling the insurrectionists — who were still in the building — to go home. He could not resist repeating his big lie about the stolen election.
These posts were cited as the reason that Facebook decided to suspend temporarily Trump from Facebook and Instagram on Jan. 6 and to extend it indefinitely the next day. On Jan. 21, the day after Joe Biden was sworn in as president, Facebook exercised its sole privilege to refer the suspension of Trump to the Facebook Oversight Board. Facebook created and funded the board in 2017 to serve as a place for appeals and review of a limited set of its content moderation decisions, strategically excluding posts it leaves up and ads. The Facebook Oversight Board will now determine if Trump will be allowed back on Facebook or not.
Even if you believe that the vile misuse of Trump’s Facebook page was acceptable before the election, Trump’s actions after the polls closed are clear grounds for his permanent removal from Facebook. Between Nov. 4, 2020, and Jan. 6, 2021, Trump waged a campaign, largely through social media, to discredit the election results.
This effort started only hours after polls closed on Nov. 3. Trump followed through on what he had threatened to do for months: against all available evidence, he claimed the election had been stolen.
Over the coming weeks, he unleashed more than 760 Facebook posts in an attempt to delegitimize the election.
After the election, Trump removed himself from the public spotlight, appearing in public and on camera 28 times in the 65 days — practically invisible for a sitting president. However, while the president was absent from the public eye, he was attempting a coup online: using his Facebook page, in addition to his Twitter account, to promote relentlessly his big lie of the stolen election.
His Facebook posts included frequent lies that the election was stolen and promotion of the infamous Jan. 6 rally itself. Perhaps most shocking was a Facebook post attacking Vice President Mike Pence, which went up while he and his family were being evacuated from the Senate only 100 feet away from a violent mob chanting “hang Mike Pence!” In fact, when the impeachment brief filed by the House cited 29 of Trump’s tweets, 25 of those tweets also appeared in an almost identical form on his Facebook page.
Together, all of these factors show that Trump’s Facebook page was an essential tool in his attempts to delegitimize the election, gather the crowd on Jan. 6, and encourage them to violence while they were still in the building. It is telling that many consider Twitter and Facebook’s suspension of Trump’s accounts following Jan. 6 to be one of the critical components to the transfer of power on Jan. 20.
Trump has shown that once he loses an election, his primary use of Facebook is to delegitimize our elections and attempt to overthrow our government. It is clear that if he’s allowed back on Facebook, he’ll go right back to assaulting the fundamentals of our democratic system. The Oversight Board must permanently suspend Donald Trump from Facebook.