Trump claims social media censors conservatives

Get breaking news alerts and special reports. The news and stories that matter, delivered weekday mornings.

Conservatives on the internet have spent years claiming social media companies discriminate against them. On Saturday, those accusations reached the White House.

President Donald Trump on Saturday tweeted a series of comments accusing social media companies of “totally discriminating against Republican/Conservative voices” but stopped short of calling for government intervention on the matter.

Trump did not name any companies specifically, but did claim that CNN and MSNBC spread “Fake News.” MSNBC is part of NBC News.

Trump’s tweets come after Facebook, Google and Apple have each taken steps to remove conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and his Infowars media outlet from its platforms. Twitter also suspended Jones for a week. Jones is best known for spreading the unfounded theory that the elementary school massacre at Sandy Hook was a hoax, a claim that has made him the target of civil lawsuits.

Tech companies have been under growing pressure to do more to manage the spread of misinformation and hate speech on their platforms after it was found that they were manipulated by Russia during the 2016 U.S. election.

In response, some conservative politicians have seized on claims from their supporters that tech companies have a liberal bias and are unfairly targeting conservative speech. In July, the House Judiciary Committee held a hearing on the topic at which some Republicans pushed executives from Google, Facebook and Twitter about their actions, asking why fringe websites like Gateway Pundit were losing web traffic.

The president is no stranger to conspiracy theories, having espoused a variety of them throughout his time as a presidential candidate and during his presidency. Trump — who appeared on Infowars in December 2015 and told Jones, “your reputation is amazing” — has made media criticism a core part of his message but recently has also begun to target tech companies.

In July, Trump criticized Twitter for restricting the reach of conservatives on its platform, a claim known as “shadowbanning.” Twitter has denied doing so.