Trump announces anti-censorship lawsuit against Facebook, Twitter

AFP
Former US president Donald Trump on Wednesday unveiled a lawsuit against Facebook, Twitter and Google.
AFP

Former US president Donald Trump on Wednesday unveiled a lawsuit against Facebook, Twitter and Google, escalating his years-long free speech battle with tech giants who he argues have wrongfully censored him.

"I'm filing, as the lead class representative, a major class-action lawsuit against the big tech giants including Facebook, Google and Twitter as well as their CEOs, Mark Zuckerberg, Sundar Pichai and Jack Dorsey – three real nice guys," Trump announced at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey.

The nation's top tech firms have become the "enforcers of illegal, unconstitutional censorship," added the 75-year-old Republican, who was banned from posting on Facebook and Twitter after his repeated false claims of 2020 election fraud fueled the violent January 6 siege of the US Capitol by his supporters.

Trump is being joined in the suit by the America First Policy Institute. They have invited thousands of citizens who have been "de-platformed" from social media sites to sign on.

"We are standing up for American democracy by standing up for free speech rights of every American – Democrat, Republican, independent, whoever it may be," Trump said. "This lawsuit is just the beginning."

Legal experts say the case – which may or may not be deemed a class action, a designation granted by a court and not just declared by a litigant – is unlikely to gain traction.

But Trump's team and the Repubican National Committee were quick to fundraise off it.

Trump filed the complaints in US District Court in southern Florida, where he is seeking an immediate halt to censorship, blacklisting and what he called the "canceling" of people who share his political views.

He stressed he is not looking for any sort of a settlement. "We're in a fight that we're going to win," he said.

The suit comes amid efforts by Congress to curb the powers of big tech. Last month the House of Representatives advanced sweeping reforms of antitrust laws aimed at the business practices of Google, Apple, Amazon and Facebook.

Facebook banned Trump indefinitely on January 7 over his incendiary comments that preceded the Capitol insurrection.

Twitter quickly followed, permanently suspending Trump due to the "risk of further incitement of violence."

In June, following a review by Facebook's independent oversight board, Facebook narrowed the ban to two years.

Trump said YouTube and its parent Google have deleted "countless videos" including many addressing the handling of the pandemic.


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