Missouri Attorney General releases more documents exposing White House’s social media censorship scheme

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. – In order to protect the constitutional liberties of all Americans, Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey continues to pursue litigation in Missouri v. Biden, a civil case demonstrating that top officials in the federal government colluded with Big tech social media companies to violate Americans’ right to free speech under the First Amendment.

 

Monday’s documents display White House Digital Director Robert Flaherty and his team’s efforts to censor opposing viewpoints on major social media platforms, such as Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

 

“I want to protect Missourians and the freedoms they enjoy, which is why as Attorney General, I will always defend the Constitution. This case is about the Biden Administration’s blatant disregard for the First Amendment and its collusion with Big Tech social media companies to suppress speech it disagrees with,” said Attorney General Bailey. “I will always fight back against unelected bureaucrats who seek indoctrinate the people of this state by violating our constitutional right to free and open debate.” 

 

Exhibits include:

 

The White House asks Twitter to censor Robert Kennedy, Jr., a known critic of the White House’s COVID-19 narrative

 

The White House directs Facebook to shut down conservative voices Tucker Carlson and Tomi Lahren

 

White House Digital Director Flaherty scolds Facebook, saying that he “really couldn’t care less about products unless they’re having measureable impact” at suppressing speech

 

Flaherty informs Facebook that “misinformation around the vaccine” is “a concern shared at the highest (and I mean highest) level of the WH”

 

Flaherty demands that Facebook to step up its operations of “removing bad information” on vaccines

 

In regard to “anti-vax” posts, Flaherty tells Facebook that “slowing it down seems reasonable”

 

Facebook assures Flaherty that “in addition to removing vaccine misinformation, we have been focused on reducing the virality of content discouraging vaccines that does not contain actionable misinformation,” including “often-true content”

 

Flaherty vehemently disagrees with Facebook’s decision not to take down a Tucker Carlson video on COVID-19 vaccines, stating “not for nothing but last time we did this dance, it ended in an insurrection”

 

Flaherty tells Twitter that “if your product is appending misinformation to our tweets that seems like a pretty fundamental issue”

 

Facebook assures Flaherty that they “remove claims public health authorities tell us have been debunked or are unsupported by evidence”

 

Flaherty accuses Twitter of “Total Calvinball” and “bending over backwards” to tolerate disfavored speech after Twitter refuses to comply with White House demands to censor a video.

 

Missouri v. Biden was filed by the attorneys general of Missouri and Louisiana on May 5, 2022.

 

They filed for a Motion for Expedited Preliminary Injunction-Related Discovery on June 17, 2022, and that motion was granted on July 12, 2022, clearing the way for Missouri and Louisiana to gather discovery and documents from Biden Administration and social media companies.