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Zuckerberg, Dorsey Face Senate Subpoenas Over N.Y. Post Story

Zuckerberg, Dorsey Face Senate Subpoenas Over N.Y. Post Story

The Senate Judiciary Committee voted Thursday to authorize subpoenas for Mark Zuckerberg and Jack Dorsey to compel testimony over their companies’ suppression of a New York Post article about Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden’s son.

Republicans are ratcheting up pressure on Facebook Inc., Twitter Inc. and other social media companies over their perceived conservative bias ahead of the presidential election Nov. 3.

Zuckerberg, Dorsey Face Senate Subpoenas Over N.Y. Post Story

The executives, who have been called to Washington before to explain their content policies, are also due to appear before the Senate Commerce Committee on Oct. 28, along with Alphabet Inc. Chief Executive Officer Sundar Pichai, to discuss their protection from legal liability for user content under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. Conservatives say the law enables the companies to silence their views and content.

The executives can still appear voluntarily, but the committee has said it will compel testimony if they don’t. A hearing date hasn’t been announced. Representatives for Facebook and Twitter declined to comment.

The vote to authorize subpoenas came as Democrats boycotted the panel’s meeting, when it moved forward Amy Coney Barrett’s nomination to sit on the Supreme Court.

GOP senators sought to bring in the CEOs after their companies moved to curb the spread of a controversial Post story on Biden’s son Hunter and his alleged exchanges with a Ukrainian executive. The story said emails purportedly from Hunter Biden, and provided by allies of the president, show he introduced an executive at a Ukrainian energy firm to his father when he was vice president.

The paper claimed the communication contradicts Joe Biden’s assertion that he hadn’t spoken to his son about his business dealings. The emails didn’t say definitively whether Biden actually met the executive and his campaign denies that he took a meeting. The details of the Post story haven’t been independently confirmed by Bloomberg News.

The companies took measures to reduce distribution of the link, citing policies that prohibit the posting of hacked or leaked materials. Twitter, which has faced a furious backlash from Republicans, including President Donald Trump, has since reversed its decision and is allowing the article to be linked.

Facebook has warned that the U.S.’s foreign adversaries, including Russia, may seek to trick journalists into amplifying hacked or inaccurate content they want to spread ahead of an election.

Trump reiterated calls for the repeal of Section 230 following the moves by the social media giants to limit the distribution of the Post’s story. Tech companies insist the provision is necessary because it allows them to host a wide variety of views and voices while protecting them from lawsuits based on user content. They argue that if the law was repealed or pared back, they would actually be forced to put additional restrictions on content, rather than fewer.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.