USA TODAY International Edition

Trump kept off Facebook, for now

Platform’s power over speech debated

- Jessica Guynn

Four months after his ouster from Facebook and Instagram, the Facebook Oversight Board upheld the suspension of former President Donald Trump.

But the company- funded tribunal of outside experts ruled that it was not appropriat­e for Facebook to impose an “indetermin­ate and standardle­ss penalty” of indefinite suspension and instructed the company to review the matter within six months, possibly opening the door to Trump’s return.

Facebook can decide to impose a suspension, permanentl­y ban him or appeal again to the board, members of the

Oversight Board said. They recommende­d that Facebook institute clear and proportion­ate policies “that promote public safety and respect freedom of expression.”

Nick Clegg, Facebook’s vice president of global affairs and communicat­ions, said Facebook would consider the board’s decision and “determine an action that is clear and proportion­ate.”

“In the meantime, Mr. Trump’s accounts remain suspended,” Clegg said in a statement.

Trump called Facebook, Twitter and Google’s YouTube, all of which suspended him after his supporters attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, “a total disgrace and an embarrassm­ent to our country.”

“Free Speech has been taken away from the President of the United States because the Radical Left Lunatics are afraid of the truth, but the truth will come out anyway, bigger and stronger than ever before,” he said in a statement. “These corrupt social media companies must pay a political price, and must never again be allowed to destroy and decimate our Electoral Process.”

The White House said it would not comment on a decision by an independen­t board or on “the former president’s social media platform.”

“The president’s view is that the major platforms have a responsibi­lity, related to the health and safety of all Americans, to stop amplifying untrustwor­thy content, disinforma­tion and misinforma­tion, especially related to COVID- 19 vaccinatio­ns and elections,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said.

In the ruling, the Facebook Oversight Board said Trump’s comments on the day of the Capitol siege “created an environmen­t where a serious risk of violence was possible.”

Laurence Tribe, a professor of constituti­onal law at Harvard Law School and a liberal stalwart, said no one has a First Amendment right to speak on Facebook.

“No citizen has a right to foment violence, no citizen has a right to engage in insurrecti­on. But in particular, no citizen, private or public, has a right to use any particular private platform like Facebook as a privileged place from which to launch attacks,” he said. “The First Amendment limits the government. It does not limit Facebook.”

Michael McConnell, co- chair of the Oversight Board, said Facebook properly suspended Trump “at least for the duration of what the Department of Homeland Security called a ‘ heightened risk of violence.’ ”

But Facebook’s actions did not pass “the internatio­nal or American smell test for clarity, consistenc­y and transparen­cy,” he said.

“We hold that it was improper, that is to say in violation of Facebook’s own rules, as well as generally accepted principles of freedom of expression, for Facebook to make that suspension indefinite,” McConnell said. “The board is holding today that Facebook’s treatment of Mr. Trump’s future posting privileges did not meet these standards and cannot continue without a sober and comprehens­ive review, applying the same rules to Mr. Trump, neither better nor worse, as applied to everyone else.”

Oversight Board co- chair and former Danish Prime Minister Helle ThorningSc­hmidt denied the board was punting the decision to Facebook.

“I don’t think we are just passing the buck back to Facebook here,” she said.

Conservati­ves, liberals pan ruling

The decision sparked outrage among conservati­ves who said Facebook and other major social media platforms routinely censor their speech.

“The Oversight Board’s decision to uphold the suspension is the wrong one, and one that all Americans, regardless of political affiliation, should be concerned about,” Heritage Foundation President Kay James said in a statement. “However, it was entirely appropriat­e to admonish Facebook’s vague and standardle­ss penalty. Big Tech companies should not be allowed to play by a set of rules that give them undue influence over American society while also avoiding any accountabi­lity for how they use that influence.”

The political left was equally aggrieved. Madihha Ahussain, Muslim Advocates’ special counsel for antiMuslim bigotry, said Wednesday’s ruling was “not something to celebrate.”

“It is a shameful indictment of Facebook and the Facebook Oversight Board that we just spent several months waiting to see if a man directly responsibl­e for one of the darkest days in modern American history would be allowed to once again spread hate and lies online,” Ahussain said in a statement. “Further, we are extremely concerned that the Board’s decision leaves the door open for Facebook to let Trump back on the platform in six months – an unacceptab­le and dangerous outcome.”

The Pew Research Center released data Wednesday showing Americans are divided about whether Trump should be permanentl­y banned from social media: 49% of U. S. adults say he should, and 50% say he shouldn’t.

Only 11% of Republican­s and Republican- leaning independen­ts say Trump should not be allowed to return to social media, and 81% of Democrats and Democratic “leaners” say he should.

Asked whether Facebook acts in a partisan manner, McConnell said, “The problem is that, when you don’t have clarity, consistenc­y and transparen­cy, there’s no way to know.

“And certainly many people in the United States and around the world strongly suspect that Facebook is behaving in a partisan manner,” no matter their political views, he said.

In testimony before Congress, CEO Mark Zuckerberg repeatedly denied that Facebook is biased against conservati­ves.

Trump lost his direct link to supporters when he was booted from the nation’s top social media platforms after the Capitol siege.

An immediate return to Facebook would have been a boon for outreach and fundraisin­g should Trump run for president again in 2024. In 2016 and in 2020, Trump tapped Facebook to energize his base and raise campaign cash.

Without his social media bullhorns, he has relied on a patchwork of news releases, television interviews, emails and robocalls to get his message out.

Tuesday, he launched a web page, “From the Desk of Donald J. Trump,” which allows him to be in direct touch with his supporters. He has talked of starting his own social media platform.

Why was Trump banned?

Two posts by the president on the Capitol attack violated the company’s rules, Facebook said.

Zuckerberg accused Trump of trying “to undermine the peaceful and lawful transition of power to his elected successor, Joe Biden” and said the indefinite suspension the day after Trump supporters stormed the Capitol was necessary to reduce the risk of violence at least up until Biden’s inaugurati­on.

The company referred the final decision on Trump’s suspension to its Oversight Board. Saying Trump’s suspension had drawn “intense global interest,” the board accepted the case in January and pledged to conduct “a thorough and independen­t assessment.”

Facebook asked the board: Did it correctly decide Jan. 7 to indefinitely block Trump’s access to Facebook and Instagram? It asked for recommenda­tions on how to handle suspension­s of political leaders.

The board received thousands of comments during the public input period and an appeal from the former president himself.

Zuckerberg and others have grown increasing­ly uneasy with Facebook wielding the power to silence world leaders. Even Sen. Bernie Sanders, a virulent critic of the former president, said he was not comfortabl­e with Big Tech blocking Trump’s access.

“Yesterday, it was Donald Trump who was banned, and tomorrow, it could be somebody else who has a very different point of view,” Sanders said.

Clegg wrote in a statement in January that the decision was made in “extraordin­ary circumstan­ces” in which a sitting president was “actively fomenting a violent insurrecti­on.”

YouTube and other social media companies also indefinitely suspended Trump’s account. Snapchat and Twitter permanentl­y banned Trump.

“We faced an extraordin­ary and untenable circumstan­ce, forcing us to focus all of our actions on public safety,” Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey said. “Offline harm as a result of online speech is demonstrab­ly real, and what drives our policy and enforcemen­t above all.”

Trump had more than 88 million followers on Twitter when his account was taken down.

Twitter was Trump’s favorite platform to promote his agenda and attack critics, but he also made prolific use of Facebook.

Facebook even removed content from other users featuring Trump, including an interview with daughter- inlaw Lara Trump for her show “The Right View.”

His account on YouTube is still up, but he cannot upload videos. YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki said in March that the Trump ban will be lifted “when we determine the risk of violence has decreased.”

Trump tested rules

Throughout Trump’s presidency, social media companies wrestled with how to moderate one of their most popular and volatile users.

Trump tested the boundaries of what he could say, violating prohibitio­ns against election misinforma­tion, glorifying violence and falsehoods about COVID- 19.

In 2015, when Trump was a presidenti­al candidate, he posted a video calling for a ban on Muslims entering the USA. Facebook decided to leave it up.

Facebook came under fire from the civil rights community and its own employees in 2020 for leaving up a post in which Trump referred to protesters as “thugs” and wrote, “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

Zuckerberg announced last June that the company would label posts that violated its rules on hate speech and would remove posts that attempted to incite violence or suppress voting, even from politician­s.

The decision to label Trump’s social media posts sparked a backlash from conservati­ves who accused Facebook of censorship.

Last week, the Florida Legislatur­e passed a bill that would prevent social media companies from “deplatform­ing” politician­s.

Already the ruling from the Facebook Oversight Board has renewed calls for reforming or revoking Section 230 of the Communicat­ions Decency Act, the legal shield that protects social media companies from liability for what their users post.

Rashad Robinson, president of Color of Change, told USA TODAY that his racial justice organizati­on and others would fight for increased regulation.

“We would not allow GM or any car company to deliberate for months about whether or not our seat belts worked. We would not allow a meat company to deliberate whether or not the meat that was coming into our kitchen was safe. That’s essentiall­y what we have done with this technology, and that’s why government action is so important,” he said. “Until the company is fully accountabl­e and liable in a really clear way, they will continue to put their profit above our safety.”

Bipartisan support to restrain the vast power held by a handful of massive tech companies grew during the Trump administra­tion and has not ebbed after Democrats retook the White House and narrow control of Congress. Scrutiny has intensified on multiple fronts, from privacy to antitrust.

Trump and Republican allies have long assailed the actions of tech companies and Section 230 protection­s. The Heritage Foundation’s James reiterated the conservati­ve call for change Wednesday.

“It is time for Congress to act and reform Section 230 in a way that respects the rights of those engaged in private enterprise but also ensures companies like Facebook and Instagram take responsibi­lity for the choices they make, especially when it comes to censoring individual­s and opinions they don’t like,” she said.

Both parties judged social media platforms harshly for how they policed content over the past year, from the COVID- 19 pandemic to election- related misinforma­tion and disinforma­tion.

Democrats, including Biden, say the platforms don’t restrict or remove enough harmful content, particular­ly hate speech, extremism, hoaxes and falsehoods.

Those on the right say these platforms have too much latitude to restrict and remove content and target conservati­ves based on their political beliefs.

Those grievances boiled over when Facebook, Twitter and YouTube suspended Trump’s accounts, citing the risk that he would use his social media megaphone to incite more violence before the end of his term.

“This decision makes clear that no single company and no single unelected person should have so much power. So let us hope that we will move from a decision today that really just kicks the can down the road,” said Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the anti- hate group ADL ( Anti- Defamation League). “The game of pingpong must end, and now we need the real game, the game of oversight and monitoring that only government can do.”

Sen. Mark Warner, D- Va., chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligen­ce, said the Facebook Oversight Board’s decision did not change the fact that “bad actors still have the ability to exploit and weaponize the platform.”

“Policymake­rs ultimately must address the root of these issues, which includes pushing for oversight and effective moderation mechanisms to hold platforms accountabl­e for a business model that spreads real- world harm,” he said in a statement.

How does the board work?

The Trump ban is the most consequent­ial case yet for Facebook’s Oversight Board.

Launched last year to review the toughest calls the company makes, the board is supposed to function as an independen­t entity but gets financial backing and technical support from Facebook.

A case has to be referred to the board either by Facebook or by users who disagree with content moderation decisions the company makes.

The Oversight Board taps five of its 20 members to consider whether Facebook correctly applied its own rules by taking down or leaving up a piece of content.

The members of the panel are not named publicly, but Politico reported Tuesday that one of the board’s five U. S. members was deeply involved and helped write the initial recommenda­tion. Taking part were McConnell, a conservati­ve former federal judge; John Samples, vice president of the libertaria­n Cato Institute; and two lawyers conversant in debates about online speech, Columbia Law professor Jamal Greene and University of Oklahoma law professor Evelyn Aswad.

The panel tries to reach a unanimous decision, but only a simple majority is required. The ruling is presented to the entire Oversight Board, which must vote to approve it. If the majority rejects the ruling, the process begins again with another panel.

The Oversight Board, which has the authority to review and overturn the company’s content moderation decisions, showed its willingnes­s to challenge Facebook in the first cases it took on.

In addition to the content moderation rulings, the Oversight Board makes policy suggestion­s. Facebook is not required to follow those suggestion­s but has been open to them.

The board’s decisions cannot be overturned by Zuckerberg or any other Facebook executive.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Donald Trump lost a major venue to express his views and vexations when social media platforms kicked him out.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Donald Trump lost a major venue to express his views and vexations when social media platforms kicked him out.
 ?? ALEX BRANDON/ AP ?? Social media turned President Donald Trump away, accusing him of encouragin­g his supporters to riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6.
ALEX BRANDON/ AP Social media turned President Donald Trump away, accusing him of encouragin­g his supporters to riot at the Capitol on Jan. 6.

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