Houston Chronicle

Facebook stays out of Trump-Twitter feud

- By Mike Isaac and Cecilia Kang

SAN FRANCISCO — Earlier this week, as Twitter executives waded into a confrontat­ion with President Donald Trump, Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive of Facebook, took a different tack: He kept his head down.

On Tuesday, Twitter added a fact-check link to one of Trump’s tweets criticizin­g mail-in voting. The company said the president violated rules regarding voter suppressio­n. Trump posted the same words on Facebook, which has similar rules around voter suppressio­n. But Facebook didn’t do anything to it.

Twitter’s faceoff escalated Friday morning, when the company attached an addendum to one of Trump’s tweets. The company said the tweet had the potential to incite violence amid protests in Minneapoli­s. Facebook didn’t do anything when the same post was added to its service.

Jack Dorsey, chief executive of Twitter, took to his site not long after to say Twitter would not back down, presenting a stark contrast to Zuckerberg, who, in an interview a day earlier with Fox News, said Facebook wasn’t going to judge Trump’s posts.

“We’ve been pretty clear on our policy that we think that it wouldn’t be right for us to do fact checks for politician­s,” Zuckerberg said. “I think in general, private companies probably shouldn’t be — or especially these platform companies — shouldn’t be in the position of doing that.”

Zuckerberg’s reminder that Facebook would not interfere with posts from Trump — even if they violate rules that would apply to other people — was in part the product of his longtime belief that his company should avoid getting into the political fray and let its 3 billion users have their say.

His assurance that his company would not be an “arbiter of truth” in political discussion was also indicative of an aggressive effort over the last year or so to court Republican­s in Washington and conservati­ve voices in the media. The goal: to keep regulators off his giant internet company’s back.

By staying on the sidelines as Twitter does battle with Trump and his allies, Zuckerberg could gain unlikely Republican friends to stave off regulatory interventi­on into his business, which lawmakers around the world have threatened for more than a year.

Many people in the tech industry believe regulators — not economic collapse brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic or any other problem — are the one existentia­l risk to Zuckerberg’s business.

“Zuckerberg’s instincts have been right,” said Brendan Carr, a Republican commission­er at the Federal Communicat­ions Commission. “Zuckerberg said, ‘We trust people to make up their minds.’ ”

But Zuckerberg’s hands-off approach to Trump’s increasing­ly incendiary behavior on social media runs the risk of alienating some users who think the rules about what can be posted to Facebook should be applied equally to everyone, including world leaders. It could also infuriate some of the company’s Silicon Valley workforce, who still believe Facebook isn’t doing enough to counter misinforma­tion campaigns.

And it could lend more ammunition to critics who say Zuckerberg is still unwilling — or unable — to own up to his company’s role in disseminat­ing informatio­n to the world, particular­ly when many news organizati­ons are collapsing.

“Twitter and Facebook both have community standards and policies to combat voter suppressio­n, hate and the incitement of violence, and yet Twitter is actually enforcing those standards against the president of the United States, and Facebook is doing nothing,” said Vanita Gupta, president of the Leadership Conference of Civil and Human Rights. “The harm from this approach by Facebook is mass confusion, voter suppressio­n and possible violence.”

Twitter has started to experience the repercussi­ons of taking on the White House. Several Republican lawmakers and regulators argued — on Twitter — that Twitter was being hypocritic­al because it was focusing on Trump while allowing other world leaders to spread lies.

“I’m filing a complaint with the Federal Election Commission because of Twitter’s domestic election interferen­ce against President @realDonald­Trump,” Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida said in a tweet.

After Twitter applied the warning label on a tweet from Trump on Friday morning, Ajit Pai, the FCC chairman, called on Twitter to apply its rules against inciting violence equally to other world leaders. He provided a link to anti-Israel tweets from Iran’s supreme leader.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, retweeted Pai’s post and called for criminal action against Twitter.

“Exactly, @AjitPaiFCC. That’s why today I called on AG Barr & @stevenmnuc­hin1 to open a criminal investigat­ion into @Twitter.”

That kind of confrontat­ion is exactly what Zuckerberg, who controls a far larger internet megaphone than Dorsey, wants to avoid. In a speech at Georgetown University last October, Zuckerberg declared that political speech would be protected on Facebook, including lies made by politician­s on the site.

“Twitter is doubling down, and they are showing how amazingly bad they are at the politics on this,” said Rachel Bovard, a senior adviser to the conservati­ve Internet Accountabi­lity Project and a former aide to Republican Sens. Mike Lee of Utah and Rand Paul of Kentucky. “Republican­s want social media to be a passthroug­h, a billboard. They believe bad speech will be countered by good speech, and that is what Zuckerberg is saying he will do.”

Facebook did not immediatel­y comment Friday. A spokesman for Twitter declined to comment.

In truth, Facebook’s and Twitter’s rules are not all that different. Both companies have said they would take down posts, even from a president, if they contained threats and incitement to violence or attempts to suppress voter turnout or citizens’ ability to participat­e in elections.

But when it comes to political discussion and advertisin­g, the companies have diverged over the last year.

In October, Twitter said it would stop accepting political advertisin­g because of issues with disinforma­tion and the effect that false political ads could have on civic discourse. Facebook continued to accept political advertisin­g and said it would not fact check those ads. Zuckerberg argued that declining political ads would disenfranc­hise less well-establishe­d candidates with smaller budgets.

Zuckerberg’s courtship of conservati­ves has been aided by Joel Kaplan, a former aide in President George W. Bush’s administra­tion and a well-connected Washington operative. Zuckerberg and Kaplan have tried to convince Republican­s that although Silicon Valley may be largely left-leaning, Facebook’s platform itself is neutral.

Last year, Zuckerberg dined with top congressio­nal Republican­s, including Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri and Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina. The Facebook chief also met with conservati­ve journalist­s such as Tucker Carlson of Fox News. And in a dinner with Trump last fall, Zuckerberg flattered Trump’s standing as the public figure with the “most engaged following” across all of Facebook.

Courting conservati­ves seems to have helped Facebook in Washington, but the strategy has not been entirely embraced by the company’s employees.

Some have long believed that a double standard applies to conservati­ves on the platform. In discussion­s posted to the company’s internal message boards and privately between employees Friday, workers wondered what the final breaking point will be for Facebook to enforce its rules evenly, according to three people familiar with the company’s internal deliberati­ons.

Zuckerberg’s attempts to avoid the political fray face additional challenges. Democrats are criticizin­g Zuckerberg’s unwillingn­ess to enforce its policies, while Republican­s are embracing an executive order handed down by Trump that could make tech companies — including, and especially, Facebook — liable for the content that appears on their platforms.

“They’re not neutral platforms; they are publishers, the most powerful publishers in the world,” said Carlson in a monologue delivered on his show Thursday evening. “It empowers a handful of tech monopolies to the detriment of everyone else.”

 ?? Screenshot Twitter.com ?? Twitter said this tweet from President Donald Trump had the potential to incite violence amid protests in Minneapoli­s.
Screenshot Twitter.com Twitter said this tweet from President Donald Trump had the potential to incite violence amid protests in Minneapoli­s.

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