Musk Confirms: Yes, Twitter Has Interfered in Elections
Newly minted Twitter CEO
and owner Elon Musk revealed Wednesday that under previously leadership, the
social media giant did in fact interfere in elections. Musk promised
"Twitter 2.0" will change course and operate transparently on the
issue.
Most infamously, Twitter
banned any mention of Hunter Biden's "laptop from hell" in the lead
up to the 2020 presidential election. By default, they also censored Joe
Biden's deep involvement and shady business dealings with foreign
adversaries.
At the time platform
executives, including then CEO Jack Dorsey, justified the multi-month banning
of the account belonging to the New York Post -- the nation's oldest paper --
whose reporters broke the laptop story in October 2020. They also banned White
House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany after she shared the story, along with
countless others who did the same.
During testimony on
Capitol Hill in 2021, Dorsey admitted the social media
platform had no factual basis for censoring the story.
Twitter doesn’t have a
“censoring department” that blocked The Post from tweeting last fall, CEO Jack
Dorsey said Thursday — but he wouldn’t reveal who was responsible for the
blunder.
At a congressional
hearing on misinformation and social media, Dorsey said Twitter made a “total
mistake” by barring users from sharing The Post’s bombshell October report
about Hunter Biden’s emails.
Twitter also locked The
Post out of its account for more than two weeks over baseless charges that the
exposé used hacked information — a decision Dorsey chalked up to a “process
error.”
Polling taken after the 2020 presidential election showed a significant number of voters would not have cast their ballots for Biden if they had known about the contents of the laptop.
Nearly four of five
Americans who’ve been following the Hunter Biden laptop scandal believe that
“truthful” coverage would have changed the outcome of the 2020 presidential
election, according to a new poll.
A similar percentage
also said they’re convinced that information on the computer is real, with just
11% saying they thought it was “created by Russia,” according to the survey
conducted by the New Jersey-based Technometrica Institute of Policy and
Politics.
And an even higher
number — 81% — said US Attorney General Merrick Garland should appoint a
special counsel to investigate matters related to the first son’s infamous
laptop, the existence of which was exclusively revealed by The Post in October
2020.
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