Twitter fact-checks Trump tweet for the first time

Published May 27, 2020

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San Francisco - Twitter on

Tuesday for the first time prompted readers to check the facts

in tweets sent by US President Donald Trump, warning that his

claims about mail-in ballots were false and had been debunked by

fact checkers.

The move marked a dramatic shift for the social network,

Trump's primary tool for getting an unfiltered version of his

message out to his political base, after years of permissive

policies around content on its platform.

The company has been tightening those policies in recent

years amid criticism that its hands-off approach had allowed

abuse, fake accounts and misinformation to thrive.

Trump lashed out at the company in response, accusing it -

in a tweet - of interfering in the 2020 presidential election.

"Twitter is completely stifling FREE SPEECH, and I, as

President, will not allow it to happen!" he said.

Trump, who has more than 80 million followers on Twitter,

claimed in tweets earlier in the day that mail-in ballots would

be "substantially fraudulent" and result in a "rigged election."

He also singled out the governor of California over the issue,

although the state is not the only one to use mail-in ballots.

Hours later, Twitter posted a blue exclamation mark alert

underneath those tweets, prompting readers to "get the facts

about mail-in ballots" and directing them to a page with

information aggregated by Twitter staffers about the claims.

A headline at the top of the page stated "Trump makes

unsubstantiated claim that mail-in ballots will lead to voter

fraud," and was followed by a "what you need to know" section

addressing three specific claims made in the tweets.

Trump posted the same text about mail-in ballots on his

official Facebook page, where the post picked up 170,000

reactions and was shared 17,000 times. Facebook's policy

is to remove content that misrepresents methods of voting or

voter registration, but in this case it left the post untouched.

"We believe that people should be able to have a robust

debate about the electoral process, which is why we have crafted

our policies to focus on misrepresentations that would interfere

with the vote," a Facebook spokesman told Reuters.

Twitter said the application of a fact-checking label to the

president's tweets was an extension of its new "misleading

information" policy, introduced earlier this month to combat

misinformation about the coronavirus.

It said at the time that it would later extend the Covid-19

policy to other types of disputed or misleading information.

Twitter so far has used its policies sparingly against major

political figures, but did delete tweets by the presidents of

Brazil and Venezuela which violated its coronavirus rules.

The company's alert on Trump's mail-in ballot tweets came

hours after it declined to take action on separate tweets Trump

had sent about the 2001 death of a former congressional staff

member for Joe Scarborough, after her widower asked the company

to remove them for furthering false claims.

A Twitter spokesman told Reuters Trump's mail-in ballot

tweets were related to election integrity and therefore subject

to different treatment under its policies.

Asked about the Scarborough tweets, a Twitter spokeswoman

said the company was expanding its products and policies to

address such tweets more effectively in the future, without

elaborating.'

Reuters

Related Topics:

Donald Trump