The Mercury News

Presidenti­al candidate sues Google, claims free speech violated

Gabbard says tech giant axed ads because she seeks greater oversight of internet firms

- By Rex Crum rcrum@bayareanew­sgroup.com Contact Rex Crum at 408278-3415.

Democratic presidenti­al candidate Tulsi Gabbard has filed a $50 million suit against Google in which the Hawaii representa­tive claims her free speech rights were violated by the internet giant when it suspended her campaign’s advertisin­g account following a Democratic debate last month.

Gabbard filed the suit in federal court in Los Angeles late Thursday. In the suit, Tulsi Now, a campaign committee for Gabbard, says that Google hasn’t provided it with “a straight answer— let alone a credible one” for why it suspended Gabbard’s advertisin­g account for six hours on June 27 and June 28 following the first debate of Democratic presidenti­al candidates. The account was reinstated and is currently active.

Gabbard, who has been polling at around 1% among the field of Democratic candidates, benefited from an increase in Google searches shortly after the debate. The candidate’s campaign wanted to capitalize on Gabbard’s spike in interest, but said Google shut down advertisin­g efforts just as searches about Gabbard reached a peak.

The lawsuit alleges that Google might have taken down Gabbard’s ad account due to her stance on seeking greater federal oversight of many large tech companies that have access to troves of individual­s’ personal data.

“For hours, as millions of Americans searched Google for informatio­n about Tulsi, and as Tulsi was trying, through Google, to speak to them, her Google Ads account was arbitraril­y and forcibly taken offline,” the lawsuit said. “By acting to silence Gabbard at exactly the moment when her speech was most important, and most ready to be heard—and in the single most politicall­y charged context in the United States, a presidenti­al election campaign Google violated the Campaign’s federal and State rights to free speech.”

In a statement given to this news organizati­on, Google didn’t address Gabbard’s suit. However, the company said that an unexpected large increase in spending on advertisem­ents caused its internal systems to shut down Gabbard’s ad campaign as a preventati­ve measure against possible fraud.

“We have automated systems that flag unusual activity on all advertiser accounts,” Google said. “In this case, our system triggered a suspension and the account was reinstated shortly thereafter.”

Google went on to deny that the suspension was in any way related to Gabbard’s political views.

“We are proud to offer ad products that help campaigns connect directly with voters,” Google said. “And we do so without bias toward any party or political ideology.”

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