Facebook recorded a video interview with Donald Trump conducted through his stepdaughter Lara Trump for his exhibition “The Right View. “
Facebook spokesman Andy Stone said the video is not allowed on Facebook and Instagram due to the former president’s indefinite suspension after the fatal Capitol riot.
On Tuesday, Lara Trump posted on Instagram: “GREAT SHOW THIS SOIR – I’ll be joined through President Donald Trump in The Right View!”
Lara Trump, who is married to Eric Trump, won a Facebook email stating that content voiced by former President Trump “lately is allowed on our platforms (including new messages with President Trump speaking). “
Facebook warned that all long-running posts would also be deleted “causing more limitations on the accounts that post them. “Lara Trump then posted the video interview on the Rumble social network.
Facebook suspended Trump following the January 6 attack on Capitol Hill, which raised incitement to violence.
Donald Trump sued: U. S. Capitol police officialsBut it’s not the first time Former President Donald Trump Suede for Inciting Capitol
Trump returns: Donald Trump launches for non-public office
Nick Clegg of Facebook, vice president of global affairs, wrote at the time that the resolution adopted in “extraordinary circumstances” in which a president-in-office “actively fostered a violent insurrection aimed at thwarting the nonviolent transition of power; five other people died; legislators fleeing the seat of democracy.
“This has never happened before, and we hope it may not happen again,” he said. “It was a series of unprecedented occasions that required unprecedented action. “
YouTube and social media corporations have also suspended Trump’s account indefinitely, while Snapchat and Twitter have definitely banned Trump.
Months after the former president suspended all major social media platforms, adding Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and YouTube from Google, YouTube said it would lift Trump’s ban when the “risk of incitement to violence” diminishes. Facebook left the ruling in the hands of a Trump has appealed its ban on Facebook and Instagram, which is owned by Facebook.
The resolution to block Trump’s access to major social media platforms after the Capitol riots was well received by Trump critics and won by most Americans, but was condemned by Trump and lax speech advocates who warned she set a damaging precedent.
CEO Mark Zuckerberg and others are uncomfortable with Facebook exercising the strength to silence world leaders and reshape the country’s online conversation. the fatal attack on Capitol Hill.
Trump spokesman Jason Miller said the former president would return to social media with his own social network.
“I think we’ll see President Trump on social media again, in about two to three months here, with his own platform,” Miller recently told Fox News.
“This is anything I think will be the popular maximum price ticket on social media. This will absolutely redefine the game. And everyone will wait and see to see what President Trump is doing, but it will be their own platform,” Trump said. . He said long-time adviser.
On Wednesday, Fox News reported that Trump’s social media plans were advancing. “President Trump will regain his voice in one or the other,” a source told the network.