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Trump accuses social media firms of discrimination against conservatives

BERKELEY HEIGHTS, N.J. — President Donald Trump said Saturday that conservative voices were being unfairly censored on social media, hinting that he might intervene if his allies’ accounts continued to be shut down.

“Speaking loudly and clearly for the Trump Administration, we won’t let that happen,” he added.

Social media companies, facing pressure from lawmakers and users over their role in the rise of misinformation and partisan division, have promised to step up their enforcement practices.

They have banned a number of pages and accounts in recent weeks for being involved in activity intended to disrupt the midterm elections, and almost all of the major platforms removed content from Alex Jones, the far-right conspiracy theorist, this month over what they called hateful and violent speech.

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After the content from Jones and his website, Infowars, was removed, he issued a plea to Trump to block the companies’ actions and “come out before the midterms and make the censorship the big issue.”

In the same video appeal, Jones urged Trump to “point out that the communist Chinese have penetrated and infiltrated” the U.S. election system and are “way, way worse than the Russians.”

Minutes after his tweets Saturday morning about social media, the president — who has long had an affinity for conspiracy theories — appeared to do just that.

“All of the fools that are so focused on looking only at Russia should start also looking in another direction, China,” Trump wrote. “But in the end, if we are smart, tough and well prepared, we will get along with everyone!”

In his tweets Saturday, Trump urged social media companies to “let everybody participate, good & bad,” saying that while networks like CNN and MSNBC might be “fake news,” he does not “ask that their sick behavior be removed.”

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Yet Trump has waged relentless attacks on news coverage that he does not like, and has long expressed hostility toward traditional press freedoms.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Emily Cochrane © 2018 The New York Times

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