Las Vegas Review-Journal

Twitter’s move vs. Mcconnell draws protest

- By Rebecca Reynolds Yonker and Alan Fram The Associated Press

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The Republican Party, the Trump campaign and other GOP organizati­ons said Thursday they are freezing their spending on Twitter to protest the platform’s treatment of Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell.

Twitter temporaril­y locked Mcconnell’s campaign account Wednesday after it shared a video in which some protesters spoke of violence outside his Kentucky home, where he is recovering from a shoulder fracture.

The social media platform said in a statement that users were locked out temporaril­y due to a tweet “that violated our violent threats policy, specifical­ly threats involving physical safety.”

The statement did not indicate exactly how long the account was frozen, saying only that it was temporary. The account was active Thursday but no longer contained the tweet.

The Courier-journal in Louisville reported one protester said Mcconnell should have broken his neck instead of fracturing his shoulder; another spoke of violence when responding to a reference about a hypothetic­al Mcconnell voodoo doll.

In an interview Thursday on Louisville radio station WHAS, Mcconnell said the decision to ban his campaign account was indicative of the “leftwing tilt of these big companies,” which he said suppress speech on social media they don’t agree with but did nothing when people were calling him “Massacre Mitch.”

Some Twitter users applied that label to the senator for blocking considerat­ion of House legislatio­n imposing new regulation­s on firearms. Mcconnell called the label “obviously an invitation to violence.”

Twitter and other social media companies say they have no political bias.

Parker Hamilton Poling, executive director of the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee, said her organizati­on was halting Twitter spending “until they correct their inexcusabl­e targeting of Team Mitch.”

“We will stand firmly with our friends against anti-conservati­ve bias,” Poling said.

The national Republican Party and President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign had projected spending $300,000 to $500,000 this month on Twitter, according to one GOP official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The GOP’S criticism of Twitter comes as Trump and Mcconnell are being pressured to endorse gun control measures after last weekend’s mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, that left 31 people dead.

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