Restrictions placed on Donald Trump’s Instagram and Facebook accounts will be lifted, Meta announced on Friday.
Meta’s president of global affairs, former British politician Nick Clegg, said that the decision was made in the interests of fairness for the upcoming election.
“In assessing our responsibility to allow political expression, we believe that the American people should be able to hear from the nominees for president on the same basis,” Clegg said
“In reaching this conclusion, we also considered that these penalties were a response to extreme and extraordinary circumstances, and have not had to be deployed.”
Since Trump’s Meta accounts were reinstated in January 2023, they have been subject to harsher penalties than those of other users if he violates the rules. Trump has yet to violate Meta policies, but the fear of Meta bosses was that if Trump were to commit a minor infraction during the run-up to the election, one or more of his accounts could be hit with reduced visibility or even suspended for up to two years, and that this could lead to accusations of attempting to influence the course of the election.
Trump was banned from a number of social-media platforms in the days after 6 January 2021, ostensibly for “incitement to violence.” In response, Trump founded his own social-media network Truth Social, which he still relies on as his primary means of communicating directly with his supporters, despite being reinstated on Twitter and other platforms.
Trump is still banned on Snapchat.
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