WASHINGTON ā President Donald Trump threatened social media companies with new regulation or even shuttering on Wednesday after Twitter added fact checks to two of his tweets. He turned to his Twitter account ā where else? -- to tweet his threats.
The president canāt unilaterally regulate or close the companies, and any effort would likely require action by Congress. His administration shelved a proposed executive order empowering the Federal Communications Commission to regulate technology companies, citing concerns it wouldn't pass legal muster. But that didn't stop Trump from angrily issuing strong warnings.
Recommended Videos
Trump, the historically prolific tweeter of political barbs and blasts, claimed on Twitter early Wednesday that tech giants āsilence conservative voices."
āWe will strongly regulate, or close them down, before we can ever allow this to happen," he tweeted. Later, also on Twitter, he threatened, āBig Action to follow.ā
He repeated his unsubstantiated claim ā which sparked his latest showdown with Silicon Valley ā that expanding mail-in voting āwould be a free for all on cheating, forgery and the theft of Ballots.ā
There was no immediate reaction from Twitter or other social media companies to the presidentās threats.
Trump and his campaign had lashed out Tuesday after Twitter added a warning phrase to two Trump tweets that called mail-in ballots āfraudulentā and predicted that āmail boxes will be robbed,ā among other things. Under the tweets, there is now a link reading āGet the facts about mail-in ballotsā that guides users to a Twitter āmomentsā page with fact checks and news stories about Trumpās unsubstantiated claims.
Trump replied on Twitter, accusing the platform of āinterfering in the 2020 Presidential Electionā and insisting that āas president, I will not allow this to happen.ā His 2020 campaign manager, Brad Parscale, said Twitterās āclear political biasā had led the campaign to pull āall our advertising from Twitter months ago.ā Twitter has banned all political advertising since last November.
Trump did not explain his threat Wednesday, and the call to expand regulation appeared to fly in the face of long-held conservative principles on deregulation.
But some Trump allies, who have alleged bias on the part of tech companies, have questioned whether platforms like Twitter and Facebook should continue to enjoy liability protections as āplatformsā under federal law ā or be treated more like publishers, which can face lawsuits over content.
The protections have been credited with allowing the unfettered growth of the internet for more than two decades, but now some Trump allies are advocating that social media companies face more scrutiny.
āBig tech gets a huge handout from the federal government," Republican Sen. Josh Hawley told Fox News. āThey get this special immunity, this special immunity from suits and from liability thatās worth billions of dollars to them every year. Why are they getting subsidized by federal taxpayers to censor conservatives, to censor people critical of China.ā
Meanwhile, Republicans were turning their fire on one of the Twitter executives responsible for adding the fact checks, Yoel Roth, its head of site integrity. They are pointing to tweets he sent in 2016 and 2017 railing against the president and his allies.
āFrom their bogus āfact checkā of @realDonaldTrump to their āhead of site integrityā displaying his clear hatred towards Republicans, Twitterās blatant bias has gone too far,ā tweeted Republican National Chairman Chair Ronna McDaniel.