Remarks by President Trump in a Discussion with State Attorneys General on Protecting Consumers from Social Media Abuses | Eastern North Carolina Now

    Press Release:

Cabinet Room  •  Washington, DC  •  September 23, 2020  •  3:06 P.M. EDT


    THE PRESIDENT: Okay, thank you very much. And we're here today to discuss protecting Americans from censorship, cancel culture, and consumer abuses inflicted by big tech companies. As President, I'm committed to defending the freedom of speech, and you know what's been going on. And we have some very brilliant people in this room, and they've been looking at it for a while.

    We're joined by Attorney General Bill Barr; Senator Josh Hawley; State Attorneys General Ken Paxton of Texas, Mark Brnovich of Arizona, Jeff Landry of Louisiana, Lynn Fitch of Mississippi, Eric Schmitt of Missouri, Alan Wilson of South Carolina, Sean Reyes of Utah, Leslie Rutledge of Arkansas, and Patrick Morrisey of West Virginia. That's a very talented group of people, I have to say, to have you all in one room. We appreciate it.

    In recent years, a small group of powerful technology platforms have tightened their grip over commerce and communications in America. They've used this power to engage in unscrupulous business practices while simultaneously waging war on free enterprise and free expression.

    At the urging of the radical left, these platforms have become intolerant of diverse political views and abusive toward their own users. And I think we could say as abusive as you could possibly be, in some cases. Right, Josh? You've seen that.

    For example, Twitter routinely restricts posts expressing conservative views, even from a President of the United States, while at the same time it allows Iran's Supreme Leader to freely spew vile, anti-Semitic hate and even death threats.

    Every year, countless Americans are banned, blacklisted, and silenced through arbitrary or malicious enforcement of ever-shifting rules. Some platforms exploit their power, acquire vast sums of personal data without consent, or rig their terms of service to coerce, mislead, or defraud. And we've seen it so many times.

    In May, I directed Attorney General Barr to work with the state attorneys general as they enforce the state laws against deceptive business practices.

    Today's discussion will focus on concrete legal steps to protect an open Internet and a free society, including steps to ensure the social media companies cannot deceive their users with hidden efforts to manipulate the spread of information. This is a very big subject. We're going to be discussing it; we've been discussing it. And over a fairly short period of time, I suspect, we'll come to a conclusion.

    I'd like to ask the Attorney General to say a few words. Bill, please.

    ATTORNEY GENERAL BARR: Thank you, Mr. President, for convening this roundtable. And it's a pleasure to have this opportunity to meet with all my colleagues and state attorneys general and Senator Hawley. And you state attorney generals and I are meeting tomorrow on some of our efforts in related areas. So I'm looking forward to that meeting as well.

    But we're here today as part of the President's executive order on preventing online censorship. That order tasked the Department of Justice with a number of responsibilities.

    First, the Department was directed by the President to propose legislation to reform Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. That's a provision that provides broad civil immunity to online platforms, both for hosting and for removing third-party content.

    I'm pleased to report that, earlier today, the Department, on behalf of the administration, has sent to Congress proposed legislation to reform Section 230. And that legislation addresses concerns about online censorship by requiring greater transparency and accountability when platforms remove lawful speech.

    Your executive order also directed the department to work with state attorneys general to review how state laws can be used to combat deceptive and misleading online practices. And I'd like to thank my colleagues from the states for joining us to begin addressing this important topic, and I look forward to our broader engagement on that issue.

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    You know, online platforms play a vital role in our society. Nearly everyone relies on platforms now for - on a daily basis - to communicate, to share private information, buy goods, receive news and information. And we've grown to depend on it, and necessarily, we've had to put our trust in these platforms.

    But these platforms can abuse those positions of trust, whether by deciding which voices they're going to amplify and which they're going to throttle, and by improperly tracking and collecting user data and even facilitating criminal activity. So the increased size and power of these entities really exacerbates those concerns.

    And under the President's leadership, this administration has committed to addressing potential abuses of online platforms in a number of important ways. I've already mentioned that we have proposed this legislation that will focus the immunity and make sure it is not a license to abuse and to censor their platforms.

    We also will provide the ability for individuals to pursue civil claims against online platforms that engage in bad-faith censorship.

    But even in its current form, Section 230 doesn't stop the states, whether we work - whether they work alone or together or with the Department of Justice - it doesn't prevent the states from using their own state laws against platforms that are engaged in defrauding or misleading users.

    Section 230 does not bar the states from bringing state law causes of action based on the platform's own conduct, as opposed to its role hosting third-party conduct. And when they engage in unfair and deceptive practices, state AGs can be the tip of the spear.

    So I'm looking forward to working with all of you. I know some states have already brought some interesting cases against platforms for fraud, deception, and misuse of sensitive personal data. And we think there's ample opportunity to continue those investigations and actions, and I'm looking forward to working with all of you to address that.

    Thank you, Mr. President.

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, Bill.

    Josh, please.

    SENATOR HAWLEY: Well, thank you, Mr. President, for convening this roundtable. It's good to see my former colleagues. Of course, I used to be a state attorney general, so great to see all of you again. Thanks for the tremendous work you're doing.

    ATTORNEY GENERAL BARR: Josh, very briefly, you were a state attorney general.

    SENATOR HAWLEY: That's right. That's right. (Laughter.) Until somebody at this table convinced me to run for something else.

    But I think that - just to amplify the President's remarks - we see, in these online platforms, the most powerful corporations in the world, maybe the most powerful corporations in the history of the world.

    They've got more information on Americans than any companies have ever had, any government has ever had. They increasingly control our communication with each other. They -

    THE PRESIDENT: So how come I won last time if they're so powerful?

    SENATOR HAWLEY: Because you beat them at their own game. You were so good at communicating.

    But - and as, you know, these -

    THE PRESIDENT: It's gotten - by the way, it's gotten a lot tougher.

    SENATOR HAWLEY: It's gotten a lot worse. And as these folks should know - reporters know, because these online platforms increasingly control the flow of news from journalists to the American public.

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    So these are incredibly powerful platforms. They need to be held accountable. And Section 230 - reforming Section 230 is a vital part of that.

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, Josh. Been a big factor.

    Would anybody like to say anything? Anybody in particular? Please.

    STATE ATTORNEY PAXTON: Sure. Mr. President, thank you again for convening us.

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.

    STATE ATTORNEY PAXTON: And, Attorney General Barr, I appreciate the work we're doing in this investigation of Google.

    You know, one of the reasons that we were so interested in this is really what you said, Senator Hawley, is that, you know, we're at this point where we have these corporations that have tremendous power. And if we don't step up to the plate now and take a look at what they're doing and how they're doing it, we may never stop it. It may be just unstoppable. Some of them are - they're really larger than countries and more powerful than countries. And they know more about people than we know about ourselves, which is a little scary.

    So I appreciate the attorney generals that are working on our case now and that are going forward with other issues. And I think this relationship that we've had with the Department of Justice under you has been just amazing. And I'm really appreciative of it because I think, together - and it takes us together to take on some of the forces that we're dealing with. So thank you very much.

    ATTORNEY GENERAL BARR: Thank you, Ken.

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, I think we can say that we're watching them very closely during this election cycle. They're being watched and scrutinized very, very closely by everybody at this table. And far beyond this table, a lot of people are watching. And we're going to just see. I mean, we see so many things that are unfair.

    But this is big time. And we'll let you know. We're going to let you know. But it's very serious. Very bad. Very serious.

    Lynn, would you like to say something?

    STATE ATTORNEY FITCH: Thank you, Mr. President.

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you.

    STATE ATTORNEY FITCH: Thank you, General Barr. We appreciate it. It's an opportunity for us to all come together and work and hold these big tech companies accountable.

    This is an opportunity to - where they've been censoring our freedom of voices, and Americans are just not going to stand for that. And so I appreciate the opportunity for us to all work together to move forward with the changing of 230 and change the dynamics of expression for voices.

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, Lynn, very much.

    STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL FITCH: Thanks, Mr. President.

    THE PRESIDENT: Anybody else? Anybody? Go ahead. Please.

    STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL MORRISEY: Mr. President, I have a story that I think you'll enjoy. When you were being criticized by Twitter, related to absentee ballots, that very same day, we concluded an investigation of West Virginia, which affirmed a lot of the very things you were saying.

    THE PRESIDENT: (Laughs.) Everything.

    STATE ATTORNEY GENERAL MORRISEY: So that type of issue is an example of what can happen when you have these social media companies run amok. And there needs to be accountability. There needs to be an advancement of the First Amendment.

    But I thought you'd appreciate the irony of that very day. That person is going to go to jail now. And, meanwhile, Twitter continues to engage and pretend that what's true is not.

    THE PRESIDENT: The whole thing with your balloting and what's going on with balloting will prove to be one of the great catastrophes in the history of our country, even beyond elections. And the Democrats know it. They know what's going on. They know how it's going on; who is getting it; who is sending it; where is it going; where is it going back; where is it coming from; are mailmen involved; who's delivering it.

    It's a very, very - and they know it is going to be. And all you have to do is look at - as in a case in West Virginia, but many cases - I would say every single case in the last number of years where they've done this. And this is a tiny scale compared to millions of millions of ballots that are being sent.

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    This is going to be one of the great catastrophes and one of the great embarrassments in the history of our country - beyond elections. And the Democrats know it, and they're setting it up for chaos. And that's what they've done.

    And these media companies, if you criticize it, they flag you, they take you down, they do all sorts of things. And they know it, too. They know it, too. But you've done a great job. When you did that in West Virginia and it was - it happened to be the same day that we were criticized -
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